Submitted by PsychoBalloons t3_ydlzy7 in books
I'm not a big fan of Stephen King's work. Up until this point, I have only read his book * Cell *, parts of the book *The Shining*, saw *The Shining* movie(didn't really like it), and now I have read *Later*. *Later* is a recently released novel of his that is apart of his Hard Case series of books. Though, there are some elements of horror spread throughout(But more on that later).
The book follows Jamie Conklin, a boy who has the power to see dead people and can extract the truth from them. He lives with his mother who runs a business publishing books while his Uncle Harry lives in various care facilities having contracted early-onset Alzheimer's. Jamie ends up having to use his powers to solve a case involving someone who plans on killing a lot of people from beyond the grave. However, solving the case causes a lot more trouble for Jamie than he originally anticipated(But more on that later).
While it may sound interesting, the book is anything but. Most of the time, the story is about Jamie as a pre-teen dealing with his life situations with the dead-body-viewing taking up a small portion of the book. The main conflict that the book presents, the case regarding the killer, gets resolved within two of the books 50+ chapters. The characters in this book are also not that interesting aside from Mr. Burkett who I wished we got to see more of(But more on that later).
A few other weird things I uncovered reading this book: the main killer's ghost apparently gets supernatural powers for no exact reason, the character Liz Dutton suddenly turns evil without much buildup, there's at least one or two spelling errors, and perhaps the weirdest thing in the entire novel happens in the last few pages where we are revealed who Jamie's father actually is. The ending regarding who Jamie's father is is so...awful. I felt that Stephen King could have done literally ANYTHING else but what he did regarding Jamie's dad(But more on that later).
Overall, I did not like this book whatsoever. The last few chapters did hold my attention pretty well, but the overall story I feel is pretty weak. Come to think of it, I may just not like Stephen King's work. I still have not read any of his most famous works like *Carrie* or *It*, but if they are anything like *Later*, then I may just end up not wanting to read them(But more on that later).
HumanOrion t1_itvyzwv wrote
Slow down. If you're thinking about basing your entire opinion on Stephen King on Cell and Later, you're making a big mistake.
Rather than suggesting you dive into one of his huge (and amazing) works like It or The Stand, I'm going to make the recommendation you ease into it. Maybe move on to the Different Seasons collection of novellas to see if you have the potential to be a King fan.
If you read those four stories and still don't appreciate King, I think it's then safe to conclude that he's not for you.