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Letting Go Is Hard To Do

        It happens to us all…

We fall in love with a character. Maybe it’s not the main character. Maybe you don’t even like the book. But for some reason, you want him, or her, or it, back again, even if you have to put up with people, places, and things you’d rather never experience again. “Love” might not be the exact feeling you have for that character, even. It’s possible to feel that way about some villains, like, for instance, the mayor of Sunnydale in Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

That’s probably why I kept reading Game of Thrones. Martin doesn’t really have one main character, and just when you think you hate one completely, there’s a total turnaround in the character. So when the characters start dropping like flies, there’s always another connected story to entangle you. My son heard a comment about Martin killing off all his characters and said, “Oh, does he write The Walking Dead? My friend says everyone on The Walking Dead dies, too” (a second grader watching The Walking Dead is mind-bending to me, but that’s another soapbox).

I  like good world building and good genre fiction that plans to explore the nooks and crannies of  an imagined world or universe (the Liaden universe created by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, for instance, or the Dark Tower books by Stephen King). It’s easier to excuse a less-than-successful story, when there are many others to fill things out (I find this to be true of Marion Zimmer Bradley’s Darkover books, for instance). But sometimes there is not as much chance that you’ll run across the same characters regularly, and when they’re gone, you can’t necessarily expect them to reappear in the next book. And then you miss them.

I would say that right now it’s more likely now to find a series with one main character who narrates the story (in romance or in YA fiction you often find alternating points of view, but from a core of main characters) and, frankly, sometimes the main character, or the one who is supposed to be most sympathetic, is the one you wish weren’t there. In Maggie Stiefvater’s The Dream Thieves, the characters I loved were Calla and Persephone, who have very minor roles in the book. In Kim Harrison’s Rachel Morgan series, I keep reading partly because I love Jenks and Matalina, and want to find out what will happen with David and Ceri. Rachel’s mother is also a fantastic character. I want to know what happens with them. Rachel, the point of view character? Her, I could live without.

When a character you love, or love to hate, disappears from the story, or the series, or your life, of course you miss him, or her. When the story’s done, and you loved the world it was in, it’s hard to return to your daily life. That character is still there in the pages you turned, in the imagined world the author created, unforgettable. As hard as it is to tear myself away, I know I can always return… but it will be time to put my kids to bed before I know it, and someday soon, even though the characters I loved on the page will still be there, the ones in my life will change, and I’ll never get this day back.

 

What worlds do you visit? What characters do you miss?
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Guest Review by Rocky Wood: The Dark Tower Companion: A Guide to Stephen King’s Epic Fantasy by Bev Vincent

We are lucky today to have a review by Rocky Wood, an expert on the work of Stephen King, of  Bev Vincent’s reference work The Dark Tower Companion: A Guide to Stephen King’s Epic Fantasy, which will be released in April.  Thanks very much, Rocky!

 

The Dark Tower Companion: A Guide to Stephen King’s Epic Fantasy by Bev Vincent (New American Library paperback – April 2013)

The Dark Tower Cycle is Stephen King’s magnum opus – an epic dark fantasy contained in eight novels and a novella. The ‘Cycle’ also leaks over into many of his other books and short stories; so that it can be argued King’s entire canon is Dark Tower-centric. We all know King’s popularity with readers but many have yet to be exposed to this complex tale – so much so that many readers would benefit from a Guide to the series. The protagonist is Roland Deschain – a sort of gunslinger knight from a fallen empire on a quest to save the central hub of the Universe from destruction. Along the way he gathers a group of followers and we learn more about the flawed hero as each novel passes.

Robin Furth, a former research assistant for King, has previously published a work closely aligned with defining each character, place and things like social aspects of Mid-World (the setting for Roland Deschain’s search for the mysterious Dark Tower) – Stephen King’s The Dark Tower: The Complete Concordance, Revised and Updated.

Bev Vincent, author of The Road to the Dark Tower, takes a different tack – explaining each novel and related story in a clean, easy to follow narrative style. Allied to these are a number of small chapters dealing with such things as Roland’s enemies and a fascinating section about settings from our own world (there is a definite transfer between Roland’s world and ours).

The book will be a boon to new readers, as well as those who are familiar but find some of the complexity and what King admits are loose ends daunting. There’s even an interview with King, in which he reveals some interesting background. Possibly less useful to the average reader but of value to Dark Tower junkies is the Dark Tower artwork section (each book has ‘Artist’s Edition’ featuring exquisite imaginings of many characters and the Dark Tower itself); although the section on the many graphic novels the series has spawned will be particularly useful in libraries carrying that popular form.

Libraries should benefit from carrying this book in two ways. Firstly, it will assist new and even seasoned readers of the Dark Tower Cycle to a better understanding and enjoyment of the tales. Secondly, it should help those who haven’t dabbled in the King of Horror’s fantasy master work to decide whether to jump in and borrow those novels and graphic novels and commit to the series. Vincent has a clear eyed commitment to providing these readers with a portal into Mid-World and its never ending reading pleasures.

Reviewed by Rocky Wood.

Rocky Wood is the Bram Stoker Award winning author of Stephen King: A Literary Companion and other works. He lurks at www.rockywoodauthor.com