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Just After Sunset  By  cover art

Just After Sunset

By: Stephen King
Narrated by: Stephen King, Holter Graham, Mare Winningham, Denis O'Hare, Ron McLarty, Jill Eikenberry, Ben Shenkman
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Publisher's summary

King's brand new fiction title: a captivating collection of tales with dark - and light - twists from the master of this wonderful form.

What would you do if your everyday world were turned upside down in an instant? Here are 12 riveting stories about relationships with unexpected twists. Be very careful what you wish for.

Read about the acts of kindness from strangers: workmen who intervene in the obsessive exercise regime of a middle-aged artist in "Stationary Bike"; the unexpected visitor, a blind girl, whose kiss saves a dying man; a mute hitchhiker who helps a driver get over his wife's affair.

There are tales of obsession and fights for power: "The Gingerbread Girl" runs and runs to ease her pain; two neighbours contesting for a piece of land get into "A Very Tight Place" and a man who witnesses an act of domestic violence in a "Rest Stop" needs to step into his identity as a crime writer if he's to intervene.

Then there are the unexpected outside events which turn people's worlds upside down or the right way up: a young couple, David and Willa who are derailed on a train find themselves seeking the bright lights in a nearby town and playing the jukebox, for eternity; an older couple want to punctuate the banal humdrum with something unusual - until it happens.

©2008 Stephen King (P)2008 Hodder & Stoughton

Critic reviews

"A fabulous teller of stories who can create an entire new world and make the reader live in it." ( Express)
"Storytelling - the ability to make the listener or reader need to know, demand to know, what happens next is a gift . . . Stephen King, like Charles Dickens before him, has this gift in spades." ( The Times)

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Disjointed but well worth a listen

Just After Sunset is a collection of King's short stories, both published in magazines or previously unpublished, bundled together in bite-sized, easy to listen to portions. Unlike "Full Dark, No Stars" there's no overarching theme to maintain the flow between stories and the quality is a bit inconsistent, but it's worth the purchase. "The Gingerbread Girl" and "Mute" are worth the price alone, and King himself even lends his voice for a couple of the stories.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

Fabulous

What else can you expect from the great Mr King.
Simply Fabulous!!!

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    4 out of 5 stars

Mostly mediocre, with some brilliant gems

Before going into my biassed review, let me first summarize by saying that "Just After Sunset" offers a diverse set of stories with wide-ranging ideas. The majority of the narrators do a great job of bringing the stories to life. That being said, there were really only two tales in this anthology that really wowed me, while the rest were average. That isn't to say they were bad. they just didn't give me that "wow" factor that I've come to expect from King's other brilliant stories.

My favourite story in this book is "N.". I absolutely LOVED this one. Why? Because it has the kind of theme that really draws me in and fascinates me: the idea that our world sits adjacent to another darker one; one filled with unspeakable evil and nightmarish monsters. The idea that this dark realm is separated from us by a thin protective barrier that bleeds through at certain weak points of the world is just brilliant and terrifying.

While this idea is solid and a great foundation to build the story from, King outdoes himself by taking the real-life condition of OCD and making it a kind of supernatural power that is used to "board up" the veil when it begins to weaken. The two main characters of the story both end up quite mad, as they realize this is the only way to protect our world from the horrors of the other: place this object diagonally across from this one. Touch each of these stones in turn etc. Their descent into insanity is inevitable as they realize with horror that the amount of "count, touch, place" required increases as time goes on. The other brilliant factor is the idea that the veil will not weaken unless someone physically sees the objects keeping it boarded up with their own eyes. It sounds confusing, but it really is great storytelling. King himself states that this is his attempt at creating a story in the same vein as Machin's "The Great God Pan". This story made me go out and read Machin's book, and while it is a great story, I think King has done better.

The other story that shines is "The Stationary Bike". I enjoyed this story because once again the idea was fantastic: A man not used to exercising suddenly has his own body start to work against him when he decides to get his health in order. I loved the idea that the main character actually manifests the agents that attempt to stop him at all costs. From what I can deduce, it is implied that it is the character's sub-conscious is the culprit. There is some part of him that doesn't want to get healthier, and it will do just about anything to make him stop. The sense of doom that prevails as the agents slowly catch up to our guy as he rides his exercise bike along his imaginary road makes for a suspenseful read. I only wish the story ended differently than it did. But if it ended the way I wanted it to, it wouldn't make any sense.

As previously stated, the narrators mostly do a great job. While I love King, I find that his narration of his own stories is flat and takes away from the experience of listening to them. But I do love his little addenda at the end of his story collections that give us an insight as to how he comes up with the ideas for his stories and the reasons why he decides to write them.

If nothing else, buy this book for the two stories outlined above. You won't be disappointed. Oh and one more thing, "A Very Tight Place" is just disgusting and when King says he loved every minute of writing it, it just goes to show how sick his sense of fun is. Don't eat anything while you listen to it.

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