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Dr. Mommy (Mills & Boon Desire) (From Here to Maternity, Book 5) eBook(First edition). By Elizabeth Bevarly · g opens leondumoulin.nl in a new tab. Dr. Mommy.
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The fantasy elements are what kept me reading. Witches and scenes of small-town medieval village life enliven an otherwise extremely dreary narrative.

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Took me longer to read this book than the first three combined. It took me a while to finish but loved it. I ended up crying which means it hit home. Will read again. I also have The Dutch copy. I didn't enjoy this one nearly as much as the previous three, probably because I wasn't all that interested in Roland's backstory, or at least having his backstory take up a whole book. I was ready to give this 3 stars, but the last third of the book was a lot more to my liking than the rest of it. This is my favorite book of the series. More of a Western than the first one. I was very sad to go back to the original characters as I liked Cuthbert and Alain.

Still in it though, even though I have doubted the way man times in each of these books. There is always something that makes me continue on, and I think it's Roland's character. Still, I wish King's editors were a little more pushy the delete key. Taken as a standalone novel which it practically is; the whole book is Roland recounting events that took place before the series proper , this is the best book in the Dark Tower saga, and comes very close to being King's best book period.

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Exciting, frightening, moving. My favourite of the series since the first book.

I thoroughly enjoyed the story of the young Roland and his earlier ka-tet. The least successful of the Dark Tower books. Awkward narration, ove long, with an unrelaible narrator--unacceptable for such an important backstory. An uncomfortable read to say the least. You know, sometimes I just want a good yarn, well-told. The fourth instalment of the dark tower series. Firstly, this book at pages long is about pages too much. But, as with the previous novels, it has left me looking forward to the next instalment.

I had forgotten pretty much the entire meat of this one somehow. I could remember the beginning with Blaine the Mono and the end with the return of the Tick-Tock Man and Flagg, but everything else about Wizard and Glass had somehow escaped me since my first reading. So, here I am again in Mid-World, witnessing Roland's past for what feels like the first time. It was a welcome return, even if it felt like a bit of a derailment of our ka-tet's quest for the Dark Tower which, considering their predicament at the opening, makes sense.

Now, looking at Roland's first adventure as a gunslinger as a solo tale, it's fantastic! So much a callback to the best of the Spaghetti Westerns that first inspired King to create Roland. Plus, we finally get to meet Alain and Cuthbert and see exactly how Roland's first ka-tet interacted with one another. There is so much richness in the tale of Roland's past, and it's great, but as I said, it feels like it just derails the main story at this point in time.

Of course, that might have been King's point. Also, I have to say, I'm glad I decided to read The Stand before reading Wizard and Glass again, because the ka-tet's time in plague-ridden Kansas seemed so much fresher through the eyes of someone who had just delved deep into the ravages of Captain Trips and the ultimate battle between good and evil represented by Mother Abagail with her Boulder Free Zone survivors and Randall Flagg, who makes his triumphant return here, where it's revealed that he is, in fact, Marten Broadcloak, the instigator of so much of Roland's pain. And I am really looking forward to hear about Roland's final confrontation with Rhea of the Coos.

That witch has it coming.


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Wizard and Glass I'm a fan of the DT series, and I nearly ditched this pg beast at least 3 times while plodding through it. The repetition is almost physically painful. About pages are entirely unnecessary and do nothing to move the story forward, they in fact keep jerking it backwards in a one step forward, two steps back fashion. Its a shame, because a decent story is buried in there, but mining it out is torturous. In the afterward - Stephen King says he lost track of whether it was a good book or not about halfway through writing it.

His editors did him no favors by not pointing out how he was holding his fan's feet in the fire. All that said - you almost can't skip it in order to continue forward.

This book bridges a long time away from the series for SK into the last years of its writing, which were executed in a comparable feverish speed the author's brush with mortality rearranging his priorities somewhat. I feel glad to be done with it. Very glad. I'm not happy with the resolutions, either. All involve vague magic and characters reappearing in overly-convenient ways. Please let the last 3 be much much better than this I've more or less been saving them to enjoy, because I understand it won't last forever.

Now I have no interest in parsing them out - because, while reading this book - the notion of the series lasting forever was hell on Earth. Finally finished Wizard and Glass, I certainly did. Oh my goodness, this book was long! And I do not mean the actual number of pages, which stopped at in my edition.

Dr. Mommy (Mills & Boon Desire) (From Here to Maternity, Book 5): First edition

Until the last pages, very little actually happened—what kept being read by me were just events leading up to a climax…very lengthily explained events at that. Now, I am not the one to quibble of the length of a King book. Take the newer edition of The Stand. It flows!

Wizard and Glass read as if its plot is over-bloated with flavor. Have you ever had a meal that was painstakingly prepared with all of the china pulled out from the cover only to have it far too pungent and rich with flavor? That is what Wizard and Glass is too me. I felt like he was trying far too hard which he's admitted to; Stephen King will admit all faults, which also makes him a fun guy in interviews and that jazz. So far, this is not my favorite of the series. My least favorite is the first, of course, for its unstructured immaturity.

That being stated, Wizard and Glass has not put me off finishing the Tower books. I just think I am going to take a small break and get back to it in January. This book took me forever to get through. To be honest I kept bring pulled away by other books as I was not very interested in the long drawn out saga of Roland's summer with Susan Delgado.

While the backstory does develop character, I would have been happier with a much shorter version or one that was broken up by the far more interesting adventures of our katet. After 6 months stuck in this book and plodding through, it is time to take a break so I can renew an interest in the rest of the saga. I really wanted to love this especially after the genius that was The Wastelands.

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God it was a chore. As much as I understand the need to go into Roland's back story, it was about pages too much. I loved getting more info about Roland's adventures with Cuthbert and Alain, and as always, King writes a fabulous set of villains. She got on my wick from her first appearance and her segments were like wading through treacle for me. And the less said about the 'Kansas' connection the better. Please please help with titles!

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I want to know them too. They are kind of few and far between…. And as much as I like reading books with teens and the younger gen … I prefer books with characters that are a little older..