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Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Stephen King-Revival

The Most Popular Bestsellers Books - Horror Novels - Stephen King's Revival Info, Plot Summary, Review and Stephen King Biography Stephen King-Revival



Author: Stephen KingStephen King


Book: Revival (405 Pgs.)Stephen King-Revival




Stephen King-Revival When Charles Jacobs, a new minister comes to town, little Jamie Morton is excited. Almost everyone in the tiny Maine hamlet comes to love Jacobs, his beautiful wife, or both of them. Things change all too suddenly when Mrs. Jacobs and her baby die in a gruesome auto accident. Half-crazed, the reverend denounces God and religion during a sermon, is banished from the town, and thereafter pursues successive careers as a sideshow huckster, and then a faith healer, fueled by his lifelong experiments with electricity. Jamie meanwhile, grows up to be a musician, and develops a drug problem, which ends after he is "saved' by Jacobs, who uses an unorthodox electrical treatment to heal Jamie and cure him of his addiction.

Afterwards, Jamie experiences strange side effects, including jabbing himself with sharp objects while in a fugue state, if trying to inject Heroin. This leads him to start looking into those that Jacobs has healed. As it turns out, many of them have experienced similar side effects and some have killed themselves and others as a result. Later, Jacobs gets in contact; Jamie's childhood sweetheart, Astrid, has developed terminal cancer. Jacobs agrees to heal her, but only if Jamie will become his personal assistant for one last experiment. Jamie reluctantly agrees, and Astrid is cured.

Jamie helps Jacobs prepare for his final experiment: Jacobs has discovered something he terms 'Secret Electricity', an all-powerful energy source that he has been using to effect his miraculous cures over the years. He now intends to harness a massive surge of this energy and channel it into a terminally ill woman named Mary Fay, who he has relocated to his lab. Jacobs' plan is to revive Mary Fay after her death, not in the conventional manner, but in the sense that she will be clinically dead and yet able to communicate with Jacobs and tell him of the afterlife, and what fate befell his wife and child after their death.

The experiment works, but not in the way Jacobs intends. The revived Mary Fay does become a doorway to the afterlife, but to the horror of both Jacobs and Jamie, there is no heaven, and no reward for piety: Instead, the fate awaiting every living person is revealed to be "The Null", a dimension of chaos, where dead humans are enslaved for eternity by insane, Lovecraftian beings, the most powerful of which is known as Mother. When Jacobs collapses with shock and Mother attempts to cross dimensions and attack Jamie, he is able to kill Mary Fay, break the connection and escape the lab.

Later, many of the people cured by Jacobs go insane and kill themselves and others, including Astrid, who kills her partner and herself. Jamie, one of the few survivors of Jacobs' treatments, is left relying heavily on antidepressants and reflecting that no matter what happens, sooner or later he is going to die and end up trapped in The Null under the yoke of Mother.

Source: Wikipedia




  • Stephen King-RevivalStephen King-Revival
    Stephen King: Revival





Stephen King: Revival - Review
Reviewed by Tasha Robinson


Jamie Morton, the narrator of Stephen King’s latest novel, frequently refers to the Reverend Charles Jacobs as “my old fifth business.” King explains the term in the opening pages of Revival: “Fifth business” is a storytelling term referring to a significant character outside the usual framework, someone who isn’t the hero or heroine, the best friend, or the villain. Every time he trots out the expression—which he does often; linguistic repetition and an obsession with idiosyncratic expressions is a long-running Stephen King tic—it’s a reminder that Jacobs doesn’t have any clear role in the story. He’s a peculiar recurring feature in Jamie’s life, a constant nagging reminder that significant events are being plotted elsewhere. But King plays coy with his readers, keeping those events and their implications hidden until the final chapters. For much of its length, Revival doesn’t feel like a novel as much as it does a narrative experiment written as a character who’s novel-adjacent, as if the entire Harry Potter saga was told from the point of Neville Longbottom, who occasionally gets dragged into the story for a scene or two, but mostly stands around in the background, wondering where everyone’s running off to this time.

But King tips his hand by opening the book with H.P. Lovecraft’s most famous lines: “That is not dead which can eternal lie. And with strange aeons even death may die.” It’s a sneaky promise for horror veterans that there’s deep and hidden madness in the works, waiting somewhere down the line. But he takes his sweet time getting there. Virtually all of Revival is a slow build that sometimes feels suspiciously like a shaggy-dog story, one which may not have a punchline. (“All foreplay, no payoff” isn’t at all typical for King, but his formless, virtually event-free novel From A Buick 8 casts a haunting shadow, proving it isn’t out of the question.) In this case, though, the story ultimately finds its way to a horrible jolt, part of which readers will probably see coming and dread all the more as a result, and part of which would take a demented fantasist of Lovecraft’s caliber to anticipate.

The book opens in 1962, with Jamie Morton as a 6-year-old, the youngest of five siblings growing up together in Harlow, Maine. Harlow is the kind of small town where everyone knows each other, and when a new reverend is assigned to the local Methodist church, Jamie’s parents are part of the collective who embrace him and make him part of the community. Jamie particularly bonds with Reverend Jacobs, a twentysomething who’s old enough to feel like an adult, but young enough to still connect with kids, and come across more like a cool uncle than an authority figure. Then a tragedy and its aftermath gets Jacobs summarily booted out of Harlow, and for many years, out of Jamie’s life. In the meantime, he grows up, discovers a talent for music, joins a band, starts a career, has a life-threatening accident, and steadily ruins his life. By the time he encounters Jacobs again, Jamie is a desperately ill heroin addict who’s burned his bridges and doesn’t have plans past the next hit. Jacobs has a way to help, but it comes with a price… sort of.

That “sort of” is a bit of an issue for Revival, which stirs some unease with developments that feel like the first stirrings of foreshadowing, but never resolve into anything. Beyond that, Revival’s primary issue is one that’s plagued King recently, particularly in his Shining sequel, Doctor Sleep: He skims across many of the biggest events in Jamie’s life, robbing them of their impact. The accident that led him to addiction, or the tragic death of one of his siblings, aren’t part of King’s agenda for Revival’s final plot developments, but they’re among the most significant events in his protagonist’s life, and it weakens his story to have Jamie bring them up only after the fact, in a few bare sentences apiece—especially since the book focuses so much time on comparative trivia and loose plot threads. Similarly, there’s a sense throughout the novel that the really important action is almost always happening elsewhere, and that it’s much more interesting than Jamie’s skimmed-over adventures in the music trade.

King constructed the book as a calculated tease, though, mostly dangling a taste of what’s going on in the main story over readers’ heads. (He’s said Revival was partially inspired by Frankenstein, and Jacobs is clearly the Victor Frankenstein character, while Jamie is at best Henry Clerval, Victor’s barely glimpsed childhood friend.) The structure has a powerful effect as a withholding technique. But it also results in a book where not much happens for hundreds of pages, suggesting in the end that Revival could have trimmed all the buildup and instead been an extremely unnerving short story. King’s fans, familiar with his sprawling voice and comfortably compelling style, may be perfectly content to hang out with him on this leisurely stroll toward eventual horror. Other readers may impatiently wish for the version of the story where Jacobs is the first order of business, rather than the fifth.



2015@http://albbookspreviews.blogspot.pt-Top Bestsellers Books - Stephen King-Revival

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