Showing posts with label Mr. Mercedes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mr. Mercedes. Show all posts
Sunday, June 7, 2015
Finders Keepers by Stephen King
Photo: from the book's Goodreads page. (Yes, I review there as well. Feel free them up.)
After finishing this book, which was essentially a good book and an okay way to pass the reading time of three days (in my case, anyway), I am nonetheless compelled to write the following:
Things That Have Annoyed Me in Stephen King's Latest Novels:
--His tendency to focus almost exclusively, at least for the first half, on the character normally considered to be the antagonist. In this case, Morris Bellamy, who kills John Rothstein (a thinly-disguised combination of J.D. Salinger and John Updike) and steals his money and notebooks. This is not ruining anything, by the way, because the inside flap tells you this faster than I just did.
Anyway, there are problems with doing this. As I've mentioned in other recent reviews of King's work, the tendency to do this insinuates to the reader (again, at least this one) that King finds his antagonists more interesting than his protagonists. (Or, at least, that he feels his readers will.) This reminds me of actors who say they prefer playing the bad guy because he's usually more interesting than the bland good guy. If this is the case, the answer here is to simply make the protagonist more convincing, or less bland, or whatever. Often, an interesting protagonist will come to mirror the antagonist, thereby creating some depth. (Hopefully this is what happens in my with-beta-readers-WIP). King has done this focus-on-the-character-who's-normally-the-antagonist thing so frequently lately that it has to be by design.
The other problem with this is that it creates a cartoonish novel. This novel will be compulsively-readable--which this one certainly is, as I finished it in a few days--but that doesn't mean it's satisfying. I mentioned in a recent King review that his books have satisfied me less and less even though I'm reading them as quickly--if not more quickly--than ever. I don't mean this as a snotty criticism, but I do mean it with seriousness. By starting off with the antagonist, and by staying with him for so long, it creates the mirage (or, not, if you're strict about this sort of semantic thing) that the antagonist is actually the protagonist, and the protagonist, who's out to stop the bad-guy protagonist from doing bad things, is actually the antagonist, by definition. This is how the old Tom & Jerry cartoons worked.
And it sucks, because it feels fake. Because, really, it's backstory made into story, and you compulsively read it because it's there and that's all there is, but...it's not satisfying. There's something wrong. I'm not critical because it's not literature (somebody hit me upside the head if I ever get that snotty); I'm critical because it's not story. Though story is what happens, and maybe why it happens, there's something more that story's supposed to be. Something more real. More weighty, perhaps, but that's entering Elitist Land, maybe. But really it's just like watching a Tom & Jerry cartoon, which I tired of in my teens. And I've tired of it here.
I'm sure King has done this purposely lately because it also falsely creates momentary cliffhangers at the end of every section. And that's not done with realness, either. It works like this: Protagonist, who's doing bad things that you want to read because we all want to see the dead body under the sheet at the car accident (King's frequently-used comparison, not mine), does bad things but comes upon some roadblock that stops him and allows the writer to introduce the protagonist--who's actually the antagonist here, by definition, because he's trying to stop the main character. (Morris Bellamy, book advertising aside, is the main character here. The cop from Mr. Mercedes, who's advertised as the main character and the star of this trilogy, does not appear in this one until literally half-way through. And he's got remarkably little to do. He really could be any retired cop from anywhere, from any novel from any writer.) In this case, that roadblock is jail time. Bellamy gets out and the game's afoot. He does something. Bill Hodges, the retired cop, does something, and catches up a little with the program. In the meantime, other characters become more important and do more important things than Hodges does, and do so right until the end. In this case, Pete Saubers is the other main character here. Hodges is maybe third or fourth in line. Anyway, the sections get shorter (yet another fake way to create tension: James Patterson-like short chapters or sections--and lots of them) and the back-and-forth gets more frequent and creates tension even when the story itself doesn't.
Fakery, I tell you.
If you've read King's books before, especially the recent ones, there's never any doubt about what's going to happen. If you've read Misery, there's never any doubt about how it's going to happen. And the little ironic twist in the last 5% of the book, that part about where the notebooks were after all--well, it made me roll my eyes. Let me know if it did the same for you.
Bleh. Compulsively readable bleh, but bleh nonetheless.
You expect something more. And maybe that's part of the problem. Maybe we shouldn't be expecting more from him anymore. Can I say that out loud?
The other thing that needs to be said out loud: His stuff isn't scary anymore. It's not even chilly. (The ending of Revival is a blessed exception here.) The only part of the novel that does that is the very, very end--an ending with a character that was in this book for .01% of it--and never in a relevant to this story kind of way. That part--smack!--is the only even closely resembling creepy part of this whole thing.
That's what we want from King, right? If I'm not going to get the real-life creeps and genius of "Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption," "The Body" or even Misery, than I want the creepiness of The Shining and IT. The stuff he's giving us lately is nothing more than bad Dean Koontz. This was especially true of Mr. Sleep, which was so bad I literally got angry. (And was reminded of Dorothy Parker's quip, about another bad book, that it wasn't something to be put aside--but should instead be thrown with great force.) But I don't want the back-and-forth of guns and robbers and that stuff. I want little boys crawling underneath the snow, being chased by an unseen something that sticks its hand out of the snow, very suddenly. I want he thrusts his fists against the posts and still insists he sees the ghosts. This is TV show crap we're getting now, since Under the Dome did so well (in the ratings, during the summer, anyway), and I don't want it. (Under the Dome is a classic example of King focusing almost-exclusively on the character who normally would be the antagonist, but isn't because of King's POV focus on him. And the "protagonist" of Under the Dome was surely a bore--Steven Seagall in Under Seige. A special-op hiding out, in retirement or not, as a cook.)
Anyway, this wasn't scary. It wasn't intense. It wasn't creepy. It wasn't memorable. It was compulsively readable--but I could say the same about my journal entries and even my shopping list.
And I'm still optimistic enough to want more out of Stephen King than this. But maybe I shouldn't be.
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Wednesday, July 2, 2014
Mr. Mercedes by Stephen King--Book Review
Photo: Book's cover art, from its Wikipedia page.
Mr. Mercedes is a much better book than King's last, the truly terrible Dr. Sleep. (Is he starting a trend of putting titles in his titles?) It is compulsively readable, as always--as is even his really bad stuff--but it is also better told, without author intrusion or author judgment. He does not judge his characters here, and he even seems to go a bit out of his way to not let his characters judge each other, as well. The result is a quick, satisfying read that's a bit skimpy on the supernatural--a pattern for King now as well, it seems.
It starts like an episode of Law & Order might, with a longishly short segment on some soon-to-be victims of a guy who purposely plows a stolen Mercedes into a line of people. Soon we turn to a typical burned-out cop who's about to eat his gun--that is, until Mr. Mercedes (Get it?) sends him a taunting letter. This revitalizes the cop, and the search is afoot.
It's told via differing limited-but-omniscient third-person POVs (another King staple) between the perp (who incorrectly refers to himself as the "perk") and the retired cop. There's nothing in the perp's life we haven't seen before (including a sad little brother right out of "The Scarlet Ibis"), but it's told directly and honestly, and we believe it. (If you've been watching Bates Motel, you already know almost everything there is to know.) There's some good stuff about how this guy is all around us--that such people "walk among us," which is another common theme lately in King's work--and there's a bit of computer savvy here that almost is too much, but stops just short. The peripheral characters in these guys' lives all ring true. King took pains not to be as lazy with his characters as he was in Dr. Sleep. Every single character rings true here.
The obligatory younger woman is here, just as she was in 11/22/63 and Bag of Bones, and it seems as real here as it did in those. Which means, not so much. This is one of the two minor caveats here: The protagonist's relationship with a woman almost twenty years younger (He's 62 and she's 44, but still...) is so unrealistic that almost everyone in the novel comments on it--especially the guy, who keeps saying to himself that he's unattractive, very overweight, and almost twenty years older than the woman, who's described as very pretty. And she, of course, comes on to him. Very, very directly, I might add. This worked a lot better in 11/22/63 and in Bag of Bones. As you read, you'll see why it's necessary for the plot, for the main character's motivation at the end, but still...It doesn't bother me too much, except that it's a pattern by now in his work, and it really sticks out in this narrative. More of an itch than a problem, I guess. The reader will roll his eyes and easily move on...
There's a lot to like here, especially with the minor characters. King gets a bit maudlin with one of them, the way Robert B. Parker did with Hawk, and it works as well here as it did for Parker--which, again, means not so much. This is the second minor caveat. It could've been cut and nothing would've been lost. Now that I write about it, I see that this bothers me more than the relationship did in the paragraph above. But, again, it was easy for me to roll my eyes and move on. I actually skipped those passages as they came. You'll see what I mean when you read it. Feel free to skip those spots as well. You won't miss anything.
Anyway, this is a likeable read with mostly-likeable characters, except for Mr. Mercedes, his mom, and a certain aunt. I read its 436 pages in a few days. It's not his best, but it's far from his worst, which is sort of all I hope from King these days. That sounds depressing, but I don't mean it to be. It's like watching a Hall of Fame ballplayer in his last few years. Good enough is good enough (exactly the opposite of what I believe for most things in life), and you smile as you compare what's in front of you with what used to be. Not a bad thing, at least for me.
Though I'm still waiting for him to write something really scary again. It's been too long...
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