Just recently, I finally finished Stephen King's
The Stand. It's an excellent book but theres a section in the last 3rd of the book that's beyond dull. I struggled to return to the book but continued onwards a week or so later. I'm glad I did. Wow.
Here's my review:
The Stand is often reputed to be Stephen King's finest novel and it's easy to see why. He was inspired to write this book after reading
The Lord of the Rings and in turn,
The Stand became the blue-print for the hit TV-series -
Lost (of which King was/is a huge fan). This epic novel is largely character-centric. The characters are great, whether the reader learns to love them or love to hate them. The character development is so rich that the reader feels they personally get to know the characters. The premise has been done many a time before - massive plague threatens the existence of mankind, but rarely (if ever) has it been done so well. The novel is long, well over a 1,000 pages, but for the most part, it moves at a brisk pace. My only complaints are that I found maybe 100 or so pages in the last 3rd of the novel to be superfluous. This time is spent developing the characters, but the story draws to a stand-still; the danger seems far off. Nothing moves the story forward. Also, there is some strong adult content, most of it necessary but some not so much. Still, it's King, the reader's not exactly going into it expecting Janette Oake content. A great read for adults. 9.5/10

Currently, I'm reading Neil Gaiman's graphic novel -
Marvel 1602. I'm not that far into it, but my understanding is that it takes the most popular Marvel Comic characters from 1960's America and transplants them to the time of Queen Elizabeth in England. I don't always agree with Gaiman's content in his books (particularly
The Sandman series) but there's no denying the man is incredibly well-read and can conjure up amazing ideas and premises from the strangest or most unlikely source-maerials. In that sense, he's a creative genius. Who else would take Marvel Comic characters and see what happened if they lived almost 400 years in the past? What would be the same? What would be different? Yes, it's a comic book but it's decidedly intelligent and very well-written. Not as ambitious as
The Sandman series but still quite good (so far).