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Loading... It (1986)by Stephen King
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In 1985, six people receive a phone call from a childhood friend named Mike, asking them to come back to their hometown of Derry, Maine so that they can fulfill a promise they made. Until the moment of the phone call, none of them remembered either Mike or the promise they made, but most of them are able to overcome the shock of their gradually returning memories and make their way to Derry. The seven members of the Losers Club first meet back in 1958, bound by their status as misfits and frequent targets of a bully named Henry Bowers. Bill, the leader of the group, has a bad stutter. His friend, Eddie, suffers from asthma and an overprotective mother. Ben is lonely and overweight, with a huge secret crush on Beverly. Beverly has an abusive father. Richie has a bad habit of letting his mouth run away with him. Stan is Jewish. The group is rounded out by Mike, who is Black. One other thing binds the group together: they've all had terrifying unexplained experiences tied to some sort of malevolent being in Derry they call "It." It killed Bill's younger brother, George, as well as many other children in Derry, and there is evidence that It has been affecting Derry for a long time. Somehow, in a way that none of the adult Losers Club members can quite remember until the time is right, they fought It. Unfortunately, they didn't quite manage to kill It. Now they need to make yet another attempt to defeat It, for good this time. I really enjoyed the first half of this. The characters were great, and I enjoyed seeing how the Losers Club was gradually formed. The connections between their child and adult selves were fascinating and occasionally heartbreaking - both Eddie and Beverly, for example, essentially married people who were like their parents and locked themselves inside the same cycles that held them when they were children. My patience started to waver during the second half. Every time I thought King was just about done with revealing what had happened in the past and finally ready to focus on the battle to come in 1985, some new scene came up. Occasionally there were brief interludes in which violent moments from Derry history were revealed. It wasn't necessarily uninteresting, but I was increasingly ready for the story to finally wrap up. Then came that scene. This was my first time reading this book, and I've never even seen the adaptations (although, not unsurprisingly, apparently that scene didn't make it into any of those). I can sort of guess what King was going for, but it absolutely was not worth the inclusion of Ok, trying to move on from that... Aspects of the ending were made even more tragic by whatever it was that affected the memories of the members of the Losers Club. In the first half of the book, I grew attached to the kids and worried which ones might die in the final battle in 1985. In reality, the real tragedy was in the forgetting - these people cared for each other enough that they were willing to face their worst fears and possibly die for each other, but not a single one of them would even be able to remember the last names, faces, or identifying characteristics of any of them even a few months later. I wish the flow of the second half had been better. I wish that Stephen King hadn't decided that Rating Note: I struggled with rating this. During the bulk of it, I'd have probably given it 4 stars. My gut reaction, after that was to downgrade to an appalled 1 star. I settled on 3 stars because the bulk of it was good, and that scene was such a weird throwaway moment that I could almost convince myself I hallucinated it. (Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.) I had a little trouble getting into the story when I first started. This surprised me because I haven't had this issues with the others books by this author that I have read so far. Once I got used to the writing style of the story and got further into it, I was hooked. It was creepy. I can see why people have serious clown phobias. The descriptions in some of the scenes are gory to say the least. I was sufficiently creeped out. That being said, I enjoyed the story immensely. I have so many more books by this author that I can't wait to read. Belongs to Publisher SeriesJ'ai lu (6904) Is contained inContainsHas the adaptationHas as a reference guide/companionHas as a commentary on the textAwardsDistinctionsNotable Lists
They were seven teenagers when they first stumbled upon the horror. Now they were grown-up men and women who had gone out into the big world to gain success and happiness. But none of them could withstand the force that drew them back to Derry, Maine to face the nightmare without an end, and the evil without a name. No library descriptions found. |
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![]() GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:![]()
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Awe, just as good as when I read it at 12. This one doesn't age, it just doesn't get dull. I loved each chapter, each word and each memory of these kids. Beverly and her struggles. Bill and his strength but also his weakness. Richie for his comic relief and love. Stan for his clear eyes but also honesty. Eddie, for his fear but also his ability to get them everywhere they need to be. And Ben, for his unconditional love and his willingness to go anywhere they took him, for his pure happiness in friendship. Mike, for his amazing heart, his good memory and his sacrifice to remember it all. Listening to this one as opposed to reading it was such a treasure. I had to lower it during Mike's sections and really cringe my way through, but otherwise, the strength of childhood friendships, the wonder of the things in the dark. The ugly truth of adulthood and their venture back into the things unknown and unremembered. Ugh, it was just so good.
"He thrusts his fists
against the post
and still insists
he sees the ghosts."
Bill, don't stop insisting. The turtle said so. (