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View Full Version : 11/22/63 by Stephen King



faithosaurus
02-08-2012, 07:03 PM
I admit, I'm biased since Stephen King is pretty much my idol.

I really enjoyed the book. It's not a horror novel, like his usual, but it was a fun read. The gist is that a man travels back in time to try and prevent the JFK assassination.

I liked how he portrayed the older times, and I also learned a lot (more than I did in my history classes, since this was fun to read).

Any thoughts?

KCurtis
02-08-2012, 07:08 PM
I admit, I'm biased since Stephen King is pretty much my idol.

I really enjoyed the book. It's not a horror novel, like his usual, but it was a fun read. The gist is that a man travels back in time to try and prevent the JFK assassination.

I liked how he portrayed the older times, and I also learned a lot (more than I did in my history classes, since this was fun to read).

Any thoughts?
I have heard this is a good book. Stephen King has written some very good books, and also some bad ones. A great story teller he can be!

faithosaurus
02-08-2012, 11:45 PM
You should definitely read it! It really is a great book.

Mutatis-Mutandis
02-08-2012, 11:49 PM
It's been a while since I've read some SK. It's always like reconnecting with an old friend. Not a super intelligent friend you meet in college, but a funny, vulgar friend you grew up with, and they're the best, really.

cacian
02-09-2012, 03:04 AM
Hey faithosaurus, I am not a King's fan as I can never go beyond the fist page of any his books.
I find him too dense and go on forever if it was not for a beginning, middle and end.
11/22/63 is this the title of the book?

MystyrMystyry
02-09-2012, 05:44 AM
That's the title.

I haven't read it yet either, but I've been looking for something new - this may be it!

faithosaurus
02-10-2012, 04:40 PM
I'm in love with Stephen King (which is probably why any story I write seems a bit demented...). It sometimes takes a bit to get to the really good stuff in the book,I admit.

Yep! That's the title.

heat4212
07-27-2012, 11:04 PM
This was one of his better books. I have a love/hate relationship with Stephen King. I love that I can pick up one of his books and become engrossed for hours. Classic summer reading!

I hate that when I get to the end of most of his novels, I want to punch him in the face. He can NOT end a book well to save his life! Luckily his son has grown up to be an author as well. He read the draft of this book and suggested an alternate ending that SK used. BLESS HIM!!

cafolini
07-28-2012, 02:34 AM
I admit, I'm biased since Stephen King is pretty much my idol.

I really enjoyed the book. It's not a horror novel, like his usual, but it was a fun read. The gist is that a man travels back in time to try and prevent the JFK assassination.

I liked how he portrayed the older times, and I also learned a lot (more than I did in my history classes, since this was fun to read).

Any thoughts?

I also like King a lot. Haven't read that one, though. But, "fiction is the truth inside the lie." ~ Stephen King :yesnod:

cacian
07-28-2012, 09:14 AM
I also like King a lot. Haven't read that one, though. But, "fiction is the truth inside the lie." ~ Stephen King :yesnod:

How is fiction a truth that is inside a lie cafolini?

cafolini
07-28-2012, 07:25 PM
He did not say "a truth." There are many many truths with the indefinite article. He's trying to tell you that "the truth" with the definite article is always a lie, just like the one that motivates fiction from nonfiction. Hard to grasp? Nonfiction is always incomplete; indeed an overall lie. He dismantles it, analyses it and comes up with another lie, the new truth in contrast. That is his definition of horror. For him it is the letting it build in the horror of covert prejudice; the truth of nonfiction; it scares people to dead.