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Gerald's Game
  

Gerald's Game [Large Print] (Hardcover)

by Stephen King (Author) "Jessie could hear the back door banging lightly, randomly, in the October breeze blowing around the house ..." (more)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (180 customer reviews)

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Amazon.com Author Profile

Read about the author. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.


From Publishers Weekly

While this is one of the best-written stories King has ever published, it will offend many through sheer bad taste. Jessie and Gerald Burlingame have been married for 20 years. Kinky sex is Gerald's game; lately he has taken to handcuffing his wife to the bedposts. During one such session, via a series of bizarre circumstances, Jessie accidentally kills her husband, and for the next 28 hours she is trapped. King effectively uses this tragicomic conceit to take us deep into the mind of "Goodwife Burlingame."sic For the first third of the book he is at the top of his form, creating in Jessie one of his most intense character studies. Then, Jessie's ruminations lead her to remember a long-repressed episode of incest that is startling not because it becomes a central element of the plot, but because the details of the sexual relationship between father and daughter are salaciously--and lengthily--described. The gory stuff--how Jessie escapes her handcuffs, for example--is prime King, but this is subsumed in the book's general tastelessness. A lame wrap-up to what might have been a thrilling short story only further compromises the enjoyment readers might have found in this surprisingly exploitative work. 1.5 million first printing; $750,000 ad/promo; BOMC main selection.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Jessie could hear the back door banging lightly, randomly, in the October breeze blowing around the house. Read the first page
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180 Reviews
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3.5 out of 5 stars (180 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely Terrifying, Nov 23 2003
By Nicholas Gordon (Lansing, MI USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Gerald's Game (Paperback)
This book was possibly the scariest thing Stephen King has ever written, with the exception of Pet Sematary.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Love & Marriage---and lingering, violent death., Oct 11 2003
This review is from: Gerald's Game (Paperback)
I think this criminally underrated little potboiler is one of Stevie King's four best novels (the others being "The Stand", "Desperation", and Salem's Lot"), and just like the other books where the Master is at the top of his game, "Gerald's Game" cuts to the chase and gets about its bloody business right from the start.

Jessie Burlingame is the wife of successful corporate attorney Gerald, her husband of 20 years. Gerald has a little personality quirk, a kinky sex game he likes to play occasionally with his good and faithful wife: he likes to handcuff Jessie to a bed in the bedroom of the remote little cabin they own on the woodsy shore of Dark Score Lake, as a prelude---one supposes---to love.

He has even picked up a special set of police handcuffs for the occasion. And within the amount of time it takes for a set of handcuff lock tumblers to go 'snicker snack', Gerald's game takes a horrible, fatal twist, leaving Jessie manacled to a piece of heavy wood furniture, her only companions the stiffening corpse of her husband and a barking, unseen dog.

And of course, this being vintage Stephen King Country, those aren't the only companions Jessie has---there are Others, naturally, but they just prefer to make their appearance when the sun goes down, when Jessie's increasingly frenzied imagination has plenty of elbow room to do its frightful work.

King likes to write about modern American men and women who are placed in dire peril and whose faculties are stretched to the limits of sanity and beyond, but "Gerald's Game" ups the ante by burying the reader deep inside Jessie Burlingame's panicked mind; this is a book about interiors, not exteriors. The narrator never leaves Jessie's fevered and restive brain, and, with the exception of dreams and flights of fancy, what we have could easily be shot as a one-set play.

Because King is able to bring his considerable talents to bear on such an intimate canvas, "Gerald's Game" is a long, dark, wickedly sick joke, relentlessly creepy. Despite the spare and limited setting, there are lots of nasty visitors to this dark banquet, not least of which are the voices in Jessie's head, the corpse of her husband, her long dead father, a wandering and hungry (rabid?) dog, spooky sounds in the darkened cabin, and that chestnut of the terror tale: Something in the Woods that wants in.

"Gerald's Game" is the Master at his finest, a taut, brilliantly paced little page-turner with a harrowing twist that would make "Sixth Sense" director M. Night Shyamalan envious. Keep the night light on for this one.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars What's Going On Here?, Sep 14 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Gerald's Game (Paperback)
This book is so different in character from other Stephen King books that I have read (which is nearly all of them) that within 10 pages I found myself wondering how it could have been written by him at all.

No matter what the particulars, this book has a tiresome plot common to many works of lesser authors (submissive-but-savvy-chick frees herself from psychological male dominion with the help of two patently contrived plot "metaphors"). The lead character was annoying, unsympathetic, and shallow (and no, hearing many voices of other equally annoying and cardboard-thin characters does not give you depth). The pace was mind-numbing--it was fluorane in print. But all of this can be forgiven (though not enjoyed), if there were not something more deeply troubling here.

Two aspects in particular make me skeptical that this is the same author who produced such works as Hearts in Atlantis and The Green Mile and Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption. The first was the dialogue, internal and external. It was beyond--or should I say below--cliche. I have never heard dialogue like this from King. The second I have already alluded to--it is the transparent contrivance of the metaphors ("the day the sun went out" was an especially tiresome and repetitious piece of melodrama). It just felt phony--something else I have never expected to find in a King book.

King is a master. This book is not worthy of him. Either (1) he cut a few corners, or (2) fired and missed badly and published the work when it should have been scrapped, or (3) did not write it at all. It will no doubt impress some of the easily impressed, but I cannot recommend it after reading so much better from him.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Under a Woman's Skin
King once again proves he is a genius at uncovering the human psyche. From a woman's point of view (almost as good as Rose Madder), Gerald's Game is a fascinating peek inside one... Read more
Published on Jun 30 2004 by T. Sacco

5.0 out of 5 stars A Tense Psychological Thriller!
After finishing Gerald's Game, I feel like I have just fallen out of the visionary world Stephen King has written, and anybody can journey to it by picking up this book. Read more
Published on April 23 2004 by Will Culp

5.0 out of 5 stars Gerald's Game
I've read almost all of Stephen King, and this was the only one that literally made me gasp in fright. Sounds girly, but that's me. Read more
Published on Mar 18 2004 by O. Neale

2.0 out of 5 stars One of King's worst
From the mind that gave us 'IT' and 'Pet Sematary' comes Gerald's Game. I'm sorry, but this was just awful. SK's gas tank of horror must have been on fumes around this time. Read more
Published on Mar 12 2004 by Johny Bottom

4.0 out of 5 stars Yes, "Gerald's Game" really is about what it is about
I started reading Stephen King around the time he published "Fire-Starter" and had occasion to hear him read from his work on a visit to the University of Iowa. Read more
Published on Feb 17 2004 by Lawrance M. Bernabo

5.0 out of 5 stars The Most Underrated King Novel
I can see why some people might be turned off from Gerald's Game due to the kinky theme. But it's hard to deny that this is probably his most wickedly terrifying novel to date. Read more
Published on Dec 20 2003 by S. Sommerville

4.0 out of 5 stars Pretty Good!
I'm not a big fan of King I find his novels ponderous, convoluted, too many plots, unbelieveable, with corny dialogue, goofy characters, lousy endings. Read more
Published on Dec 2 2003

2.0 out of 5 stars Longing for adventure
I have to agree, this book was very detailed and the plot was exciting and kept you on your toes however there was a period of neverending silence. Read more
Published on Oct 2 2003

2.0 out of 5 stars Good Writing, Mediocre Book
The story begins and continues, and continues, and continues in Jessie and Gerald Burlingame's lake cabin bedroom where a sex game ends tragically. Read more
Published on Sep 19 2003 by Mark D. Meadows

5.0 out of 5 stars Stephen King is great as usual
This is one of the easier Stephen King novels to understand. But that doesn't make a story any better or worse. Read more
Published on Jul 23 2003 by David Anderson

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