Amazon Exclusive: Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan Reviews Under the Dome
Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan share their enthusiasm for Stephen King's thriller, Under the Dome. This pair of
reviewers knows a thing or two about the art of crafting a great thriller. Del Toro is the O-nominated director of
international blockbuster films, including Pan's Labyrinth and Hellboy. Hogan is the author of several accled novels,
including The Standoff and Prince of Thieves, which won the International Association of Crime Writer's Dashiell
Hammett Award in 2005. The two recently collaborated to write the bestselling horror novel, The Strain, the first of a
proposed trilogy. Read their exclusive Amazon guest review of Under the Dome: The first thing readers might
find y about Stephen King's Under The Dome is its length. The second is the elaborate town and list of
characters at the front of the book (including "Dogs of Note"), which sometimes portends, you know, heavy lifting. Don't
you believe it. Breathless pacing and effortless characterization are the hallmarks of King's best books, and here the
writing is immersive, the suspense unrelenting. The pages turn so fast that your hand--or Kindle-clicking thumb--will
barely be able to keep up.
You Are Here.
Nobody yarns a “What if?” like Stephen King. Nobody. The implausibility of a dome sealing off an entire city--a
motif seen before in pulp magazines and on comic book covers--is given the most elaborate real-life alibi by crafting
details, observations, and ins that make us nod silently while we read. Promotional materials reference The Stand
in comparison, but we liken Under The Dome more to King's excellent novella, The Mist: another locked-door situation on
an epic scale, a tour-de-force in which external stressors bake off the civility of a small town full of dark secrets,
exposing souls both very good...and very, very bad.
Yes, "The Monsters Are Due on le Street," but there is so much more this time. The expansion of King’s diorama
does not simply take a one-street fable and turn it into a town, but finds new life for old archetypes, making them
morally complex and attuned to our world today. It makes them relevant and affecting once again. And the beauty of it
all is that the final lesson, the great in that is gained at the end of this draining journey, is not a righteous
1950’s sermon but an incredibly moving and simple truth. A nugget of wisdom you'll be using as soon as you turn the last
page.
This Is Now.
Along the way, you get bravura writing, especially featuring the town kids, and a delicious death aria involving
one of the most nefarious characters--who dies alone, but not really--as well as a few laugh-out-loud moments, and a
cameo (of sorts) by none other than Jack Reacher. Indeed--whether during a much-needed comfort break, or a therapeutic
hand-flexing--you may find yourself wondering, "Is this a horror novel? Or is it a thriller?" The answer, of course, is:
Yes, yes, yes.
"...the blood hits the wall like it always hits the wall."
It seems impossible that, as he enters his sixth decade of publishing, the dean of dark fiction could add to his
vast readership. But that is precisely what will happen...when the Dome drops.
Now Go Read It. --Guillermo Del Toro and Chuck Hogan