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View Larger Picture of Cell: A Novel  by Stephen King

Cell: A Novel

List price: $26.95
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Cell: A Novel
by Authors: Stephen King

Hardcover
Description: Witness Stephen King's triumphant, blood-spattered return to the genre that made him famous. Cell, the king of horror's homage to zombie films (the book is dedicated in part to George A. Romero) is his goriest, most horrific novel in years, not to mention the most intensely paced. Casting aside his love of elaborate character and town histories and penchant for delayed gratification, King yanks readers off their feet within the first few pages; dragging them into the fray and offering no chance catch their breath until the very last page.

In Cell King taps into readers fears of technological warfare and terrorism. Mobile phones deliver the apocalypse to millions of unsuspecting humans by wiping their brains of any humanity, leaving only aggressive and destructive impulses behind. Those without cell phones, like illustrator Clayton Riddell and his small band of "normies," must fight for survival, and their journey to find Clayton's estranged wife and young son rockets the book toward resolution.

Fans that have followed King from the beginning will recognize and appreciate Cell as a departure--King's writing has not been so pure of heart and free of hang-ups in years (wrapping up his phenomenal Dark Tower series and receiving a medal from the National Book Foundation doesn't hurt either). "Retirement" clearly suits King, and lucky for us, having nothing left to prove frees him up to write frenzied, juiced-up horror-thrillers like Cell. Stay tuned for more from the hardest-working retiree in the business with Lisey's Story, coming in October 2006. --Daphne Durham

Authors on Stephen King
Mystery writer Michael Connelly thinks Stephen King's "one of the most generous writers I know of." Thriller author Ridley Pearson says "King possesses an incredible sense of story..." Read our Stephen King testimonials to find out what else they and other authors had to say about the undisputed King of Horror.


Visit the Stephen King Store
Stephen King's illustrious career has spawned dozens of bestselling titles. Find spine-tingling titles like Cujo, Firestarter, It, The Talisman, and many more in our Stephen King Store.


Visit the Dark Tower store
Over 30 years in the making, spanning seven volumes, Stephen King's epic quest for the Dark Tower has encompassed almost his entire body of fiction. Find every volume of this fantastic adventure, an interview with the master himself, and much more in our Dark Tower Store.


Hail to the King
Fans applauded and critics howled when Stephen King was awarded the National Book Foundation's Medal for Distinguished Service to American Letters. In typical fashion, King accepted the honor with humility and urged recognition for other "popular" authors. Listen to a clip of his acceptance speech, then order the entire speech on audio CD.

More from Stephen King


The Colorado Kid


Salem's Lot: Illustrated Edition

Faithful


Average Customer Rating:

Too Under-The-Top?

Mostly a great book that really hooked me in the second half. I read it in a few sittings over the course of three days, and each time the book reeled me in like all of King's.

However, I almost felt the characters got off too easy. They didn't have nearly enough monstrous encounters with the phone-zombies at first. But the book picked up in the second half and put the characters through horror.

No, it is not another Stand. Many fans call The Stand King's best and compare all books to it. Cell is not The Stand, is not all that much like The Stand, and is good despite not being like The Stand. Not all books are SUPPOSED to be the same. King's not going to write another Stand, but that doesn't mean he isn't still writing great novels.

By the way, King's science was faulty: we actually use 100% of our brains, just not all at once.

So Cell was a great read, with not quite enough suffering for the characters at first. It redeemed itself, though, and is definitely worth buying.

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Just like the bunny......He keeps going and going!!!

Here is another great book by an equally great author. He keeps going, giving us great books to read one after another.

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Skip It, You Won't Be Missing Much

I only cared about four characters in this book:

1/ The manager of the hotel Clay was staying at
(He was developing into probably the most complex person in the story)

2/ The "Head."
(I realize he was a bit like a caricature and stereotype but he reminded me of the late John Houseman)

3/ Tom McCourt.
(He had more depth than Clay or that teen chick brat)

4/ Rafe the Cat.
(Even though he wasn't human and was peripheral, he was still the most I cared about. Does anyone else here agree with me that it was not absolutely necessary for Tom to leave the poor guy behind?)

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