ISBN: | 9780354043854 |
Publisher: | Macdonald & J |
Published: | 18 October, 1979 |
Format: | Hardcover |
Language: | English |
Editions: |
2 other editions
of this product
|
- Able Team #34 Clear Shot
- Able Team #48
- Army of Devils
- Blood Gambit
- Blood Mark
- Cairo Countdown
- Cajun Angel
- Cajun Angel
- Clear Shot
- Cold Steel
- Counterblow
- Cowboy's Revenge
- Cult War
- Dead Zone
- Death Code
- Death Code
- Death ride
- Death ride
- Deathbites
- Dueling Missiles
- Fall back and kill
- Final Run
- Fire And Maneuver
- Fire and Manoeuvre
- Firecross
- Firecross
- Five Rings of Fire
- Hard Kill
- Hit and run
- Hostaged Island
- Into the Maze
- Ironman
- Justice by Fire
- Kill Orbit
- Kill School
- Lethal Trade
- Lethal trade
- Miami Crush
- Night Heat
- Rain Of Doom
- Red Menace
- Royal flush
- Scorched Earth
- Shadow Warriors
- Shadow warriors
- Shot to Hell
- Shot to Hell
- Skinwalker
- Strike Force
- Tech War
- Texas Showdown
- The Iron God
- They Came to Kill
- Tower of Terror
- Tower of Terror
- Warlord of Azatlan
- White fire
- World War III Game
- red menace
In the St. James Guide to Horror, Ghost & Gothic Writers, Gary Westfahl predicts that "King has already earned himself a place in the history of literature.... At the very least, he will enjoy the status of a latter-day Anthony Trollope, an author respected for his popularity and social commentary.... More likely, he will be enshrined as the Charles Dickens of the late 20th century, the writer who perfectly reflected, encapsulated, and expressed the characteristic concerns of his era." If any of King's novels exemplifies his skill at portraying the concerns of his generation, it's The Dead Zone (1979). Although it contains a horrific subplot about a serial killer, it isn't strictly a horror novel. It's the story of an unassuming high school teacher, an Everyman, who suffers a gap in time--like a Rip Van Winkle who blacks out during the years 1970-75--and thus becomes acutely conscious of the way that American society is rapidly changing. He wakes up as well with a gap in his brain, the "dead zone" of the title. The zone gives him crippling headaches, but also grants him second sight, a talent he doesn't want and is reluctant to use. The crux of the novel concerns whether he will use that talent to alter the course of history. The Dead Zone is a tight, well-crafted book. When asked in 1983 which of his novels so far was "the best," Stephen King answered, "The one that I think works the best is Dead Zone. It's the one that [has] the most
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