Stephen
King´s "The
Dark Tower"
Vol. 6
Song
of Susannah
Editorial Reviews
There's something about a crippled, black, schizophrenic, civil rights activist-turned-gunslinger
whose body has been hijacked by a white, pregnant demon from a parallel world
that keeps a seven-volume story bracingly strong as it veers toward its Armageddon-like
conclusion. When Susannah Dean is transported via a magic door on the outskirts
of Calla Bryn Sturgis (the scene of much of The Dark Tower V: Wolves of the
Calla) to New York City in the summer of 1999, the "demon-mother" who
possesses her, Mia, has only one thing on her mind. She must give birth to
her "chap" at a predetermined location in Manhattan's East 60s, as
instructed by the henchmen-or "Low Men"-of the evil Crimson King.
Pressed for time, Father Callahan, preteen Jake and talking pet "billy-bumbler" Oy
follow Susannah and Mia's trail in an effort to prevent an act that would quicken
the destruction of the Dark Tower and, in turn, of all worlds. Meanwhile, gunslingers
Roland and Eddie travel to 1977 Maine in search of bookstore owner Calvin Tower,
who is being hunted down by mobster Enrico Balazar and his gang, who first
appeared in Eddie's version of New York in The Drawing of the Three Avid readers
of the series will either be completely enthralled or extremely irritated when,
in a gutsy move, the author weaves his own character into this unpredictable
saga, but either way there's no denying the ingenuity with which King paints
a candid picture of himself.
560 pages
Pocket; Reprint edition (May 23, 2006)
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