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The Dark Tower V: Wolves of the Calla
 
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The Dark Tower V: Wolves of the Calla [Hardcover]

Stephen King , Bernie Wrightson
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (260 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 52.00 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Hardcover, Nov 4 2003 CDN $52.00  
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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

"Time is a face on the water," stretching and contorting reality as gunslingers Roland, Eddie, Susannah, Jake and their talking pet "billy-bumbler" Oy continue their quest to prevent the destruction of the Dark Tower and, consequently, save all worlds from Chaos and the Crimson King's evil, red-eyed glare. Roland-the primary hero of King's epic tale, the first volume of which appeared in 1982-and company momentarily fall off the "Path of The Beam" to help the residents of Calla Bryn Sturgis, a farm town. But as Dark Tower fans know, everything follows The Beam, so what looks like a detour may really serve the will of "ka" (destiny). Roland and his posse learn that every 20-odd years the "Wolves" kidnap one child from each set of the Calla's twins, bring them to the Tower and, weeks later, send them back mentally and physically impaired. Meanwhile, back in 1977 New York City (the alternate world of Roland's surrogate son, Jake), bookstore owner Calvin Tower is being threatened by a group of thugs (readers will recognize them from The Drawing of the Three, 1987) to sell them a vacant lot in midtown Manhattan. In the lot stands a rose, or rather the Rose, which is our world's manifestation of the Dark Tower. With the help of the Old Fella (also known to `Salem's Lot readers as Father Callahan), the gunslingers must devise a plan against evil in both worlds. The task, however, is further complicated as Roland and his gang start noticing behavioral changes in wheelchair-bound, recovered schizophrenic Susannah.As the players near the Tower, readers will keep finding exciting ties between the Dark Tower universe and King's other books, with links to Black House, Insomnia, The Eyes of the Dragon, The Stand, `Salem's Lot and Hearts in Atlantis. The high suspense and extensive character development here (especially concerning Jake's coming-of-age), plus the enormity of King's ever-expanding universe, will surely keep his "Constant Readers" in awe.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Wizard and Glass (1997), volume 4 of King's massive, postapocalyptic, chivalrized western, The Dark Tower, was rather a snooze, not for lack of action but because it was primarily a flashback that drew unmercifully on King's stash of horse-opera cliches. "'S'all very nice," one thought, "but let's move it, Steve!" Volume 5--this book--moves it, despite not getting Roland the Gunslinger much nearer the Dark Tower, taking another big backward glance, and continuing to mine an open pit of oater conceits. Roland's ka-tet--himself and three twentieth-century New Yorkers, all of them now fellow gunslingers--approach a ranching and farming community anticipating a recurrent pestilence. After 23 years, the Wolves are coming from the evil-darkened East to abduct one of every pair of prepubescent twins older than three. The children will be returned, but nearly witless and sterile, doomed to grow immensely and enormously painfully in their middle teens, serve (if not too stupid) as workhorses, and suddenly, painfully wither and die in their early thirties. An erstwhile priest in the community knows what Roland and company are, and he persuades a community to send a committee to ask for their help. Of course, once asked, the code of the gunslinger compels acceptance. Gonna be a humdinger of a fight! Fore and aft of the showdown, King stuffs the book with juice, like the big flashback, in which Pere Callahan reveals his past in . . . 'Salem's Lot. One of the greatest cavalcades in popular fiction is back on track. Ray Olson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Customer Reviews

260 Reviews
5 star:
 (121)
4 star:
 (74)
3 star:
 (27)
2 star:
 (16)
1 star:
 (22)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (260 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars You're missing out if you aren't reading this series!, Jan 25 2004
This review is from: The Dark Tower V: Wolves of the Calla (Hardcover)
Stephen King's fans who don't read the Dark Tower series are really missing out. The "Wolves of Calla" is an impressive, well-written, story that raises questions King has been giving us in other works and ties in one of his very first stories in a unique way.

The suspense and drama of the books are fantastic, but I think it's the characters that really set this series apart. In "Wolves of the Calla", each member of the ka-tet has agonizing personal choices to make and their decisions, sometimes flawed, sometimes heroic, make this series something beyond classification. This isn't a drawn-out epic fantasy or a gimmicky tie in of other novels. Like "Wizard and the Glass" this novel is memorable both in itself and in what is does for the series storyline.

Jake is growing up. The Gunslinger is growing a heart (has been for some time). He's also losing some of his physical abilities, but he's a much more interesting character than when he started out. Susannah's latest personality would defy belief if written by any other writer, but Stephen King handles her masterfully. And Eddie the former junkie is now the one that's desperate to hold the group together. The battle to project a town's children against seemingly unstoppable "wolves" is just one part of the story.

The stakes are raised at the conclusion of this installment by a new character with his own stunning background added to mix and Stephen King tantalizes us with the first real glimpse of how this serious might conclude. I hate the spoilers, so that's all I'll say.

Don't miss it.

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1.0 out of 5 stars What a letdown!, Sep 11 2008
I finished this book just over an hour ago. The earlier entries drew me deeper and deeper into Roland's world. In this one, it seems like Stephen King lost nearly all creative function and started borrowing from the world's of others - and even his own earlier creations!

Dr. Doom makes an appearance!

If you like Star Wars, you'll find lightsabers aplenty here!

Harry Potter fan? Give this one a go!

But if you're a fan of the Dark Tower, this is NOT for you. This book divulges little to no information on the Path of the Beam, the Tower, the ka-tet. Instead of giving what's wanted, King instead draws a portrait of the town of Calla, and probably the most important resident: Father Callahan. This is a character from a previous work of his (Salem's Lot). Later on, Father Callahan will find the book and read it.

That's right - Salem's Lot (the book) exists in this book as if it were something REAL, not a piece of fiction. The character's find it, read it, and draw some clues from it.

Overall I have a very bitter aftertaste, and hope OH SO VERY MUCH that the series gets back on track in the next book - or the final one. This book does little for the Tower or the ka-tet, save for 30-40 pages. I wish this book could be OMITTED!

What a letdown!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Long Live Roland, Dec 5 2006
Stephen King is a master storyteller, a shaman of the written word(s). The way he has interwoven his lifes work to the greater story of the tower is awe-inspiring. Though I was disappointed with Wizard and Glass, Im glad hes back packing lead. I trudged through Wizard and Glass and moved quickly through Wolves of the Calla with a curious eye.
I have to say this though. I miss the writing styles of books one through three. They were shorter and less edited, perhaps more stephen kingish. I found the later books to be heavily edited, which isnt necessarily a bad thing, and long in the tooth. They tend to lag and get bogged down in backstory, sidestory, and every-which-way-story. The narrative of book one moved quickly, pulling the reader through Rolands life like a child being pulled by its mother through an amusement park or the zoo, all these new and bizarre things rushing by in the blink of an eye. The later books read more like the child being forced to ride the merry-go-round while mommy talks to the nice zookeeper about something, or like the child being plopped down in front of the monkey cage while mommy talks on her cell phone for a couple of hours (talking to that long-haired hippie who worked the merry-go-round). In any case, Stephen King has obviously matured as a writer, so Ill just have to get used to it. Long gone are the early 80s.
PS I swear I saw Roland at a Knicks game in 02.
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