'Salem's Lot Audiolibro Por Stephen King, Joe Hill - introduction arte de portada

'Salem's Lot

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'Salem's Lot

De: Stephen King, Joe Hill - introduction
Narrado por: Ron McLarty, Joe Hill
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NOW A NEW FILM STREAMING ON MAX • #1 BESTSELLER • Ben Mears has returned to Jerusalem’s Lot in hopes that exploring the history of the Marsten House, an old mansion long the subject of rumor and speculation, will help him cast out his personal devils and provide inspiration for his new book.

"A master storyteller."—The Los Angeles Times

When two young boys venture into the woods, and only one returns alive, Mears begins to realize that something sinister is at work. In fact, his hometown is under siege from forces of darkness far beyond his imagination. And only he, with a small group of allies, can hope to contain the evil that is growing within the borders of this small New England town.

With this, his second novel, Stephen King established himself as an indisputable master of American horror, able to transform the old conceits of the genre into something fresh and all the more frightening for taking place in a familiar, idyllic locale.

©2012 Stephen King (P)2012 Random House Audio
Horror Psicológico Suspenso Thriller y Suspenso Aterrador Vampiros Horror Fiction

Reseñas de la Crítica

’Salem’s Lot was—and still is—a hugely impressive novel. . . . It’s the slowest of slow burns, all hints and drip-feed. . . . When the chaos finally unfolds, it’s a real payoff.”—The Guardian (London)

"Spine-tingling fiction at its best."—Grand Rapids Press

"An unabashed chiller."—Austin American Statesman

Featured Article: The Shining—Book vs. Movie


Set in the claustrophobia-inducing snow-covered peaks of an isolated hotel in the middle of the Rockies, The Shining is a classic work of psychological horror that’s just about as chilling as it gets. But it’s so, so much more than your classic story of spirits and a man’s descent into madness—it’s also a tender yet deeply painful meditation on addiction, family, abuse, and redemption. Stanley Kubrick rejected Stephen King's initial treatment of the screenplay, and the author was largely dissatisfied with his novel’s jump to the big screen. So what exactly are the differences between The Shining movie and the novel?

Masterful Setting • Terrifying Vampires • Excellent Character Voices • Mounting Tension • Haunting Atmosphere

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Any additional comments?

Stephen King has written over 150 different stories, but his reported favorite of the bunch is"Salem's Lot" (1975). Salem's Lot (SL) was King's second book following Carrie (1974). In my opinion, King loved SL because it represented a transition between stories about unique individuals to stories about groups of characters interacting in social systems under duress. SL is ultimately about a group of small town folk dealing with a vampire crisis. When reading/listening to SL, true Stephen King fans will feel the rumblings of his more complex future works (IT, The Stand, and The Dome), where large groups of people form alliances to survive a supernatural calamity. With SL, King begins to lay out the formula that he will return to build some of his best novels.

Although SL has interesting historical significance for King fans, the book limps along for the first 40% of the story. King seems to struggle setting up the chess board for future play. His introduction of characters are often too long and their individual stories are often irrelevant to the plot. Considering the overall length of the book (it's a long one), it seems to meander pointlessly during several sections.

However, King kicks SL into high gear just before halftime. What follows is an exciting and well designed adventure that should not be missed. SL may be King's scariest book with so many wonderfully chilling scenes that you will certainly not sleep with your bedroom windows open despite the summer heat. I also admired King's complete knowledge of the Bram Stoker's "Dracula" and the vampire genre. King does his homework and does not reinvent vampires to sensationalize his story. There are no Stephanie Myer invented vampires here, King's vampires will eat your babies and poop out their remains.

Overall, I would recommend SL to all readers/listeners who enjoy SK or horror books in general. However, you cannot quit on this book until your more than halfway in. If you're not hooked by the halfway point your probably not going to be hooked at all.

On my book rank order evaluation system, SL ranks 37th of the 66 books I have read/listened to over the last 2 years.

Thank God! Not Twilight

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If you could sum up Salem's Lot in three words, what would they be?

Ultimately, this is a creepy novel that builds tension as a vampire lays his teeth into a small, unsuspecting teen. It starts of slow, but moves as quickly as the vampire infection, and turns into a tense, nail-biting, damn scary thriller. Some aspects of the story don't hold well over time, so certain parts did seem a bit dusty.

So...Dusty, Scary, Creepy

Which character – as performed by Ron McLarty and Stephen King – was your favorite?

McLarty performed all the characters pretty evenly.

Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?

The scene where Danny Glick scratches on Mark Petrie's windows brought back nightmares of the "Salem's Lot" TV miniseries. Also, when Mike Ryerson attacks Matt Burke the teacher and McLarty reads as Ryerson - his voice completely conveys the creepiness and fright of the moment.

Any additional comments?

I was a bit concerned when this book first started, is it does start off as a bit of a 70s romance novel more than a vampire novel. But, then I began to realize that was why it was so masterfully written. The story starts off as innocent, with some creepy elements, especially with the ever present Marsten house...and as the vampire's presence becomes known, the story picks up and moves beyond the innocent love story and quickly becomes a tense, scary horror novel.

Creepy...but a bit dusty.

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Very good suspense. The ending was barely happy enough for me. This is not a fun and entertaining read. It’s suspense. We get to know many people in the town of Jerusalem’s Lot, which is well done and interesting. Good dialogue and events. I needed to take notes to remember them all, which I didn’t mind. The vampire Barlow and his human servant Straker are bad. But the thing that upset me the most was the mother who beat her ten-month-old baby. Other unpleasant people included a mean bus driver who would unfairly force some kids to walk home, and the married woman who sexually enticed a 22-year-old telephone line worker. He was reluctant to have sex with her, but she was difficult to refuse. There are many negative people but also some good people.

My favorite part was 11-year-old Mark. He was into comic books and monster action figures. Instead of disbelief when he sees the first vampire, he immediately plans to trick it by inviting the vampire in and then presses a crucifix to the vampire’s skin. (I’m shaking my head that he just assumed what was in his comic books would work. What if these real life vampires were different from his comic books? But what he did worked! Wow!) There were several situations where Mark was surprised with danger and reacted and attacked in his own unexpected way. I was impressed! He was at the age of kow-kapow-attack-back instead of cautious thinking or fearful hiding or fleeing. I was considering 3 ½ stars for this book, but Mark is the reason I rounded to 4 stars.

WHAT WAS MISSING?
I wanted a more complete ending. I wanted more about the survivors at the end - something toward their future.

PROLOGUE:
The prologue is about 16 pages. It’s better to read after the book not before. Reading it before the book raised questions and was not helpful. After the book I went back and read the prologue and it made sense and I felt good about it.

CAUTION SPOILERS (This is what I wanted to know before I read the book):
When many people are killed or turned into vampires, it’s not as depressing as one might expect. Partly because there’s not much grief or time spent on good people being hurt. In the end Straker and Barlow are stopped which was important to me. As to other happy ending issues, some good guys died, but other good guys survived.

NARRATORS:
The narrator of the book is Ron McLarty and he does a good job. I love the Audible narrator who introduces the book at the beginning of the tape - don’t know his name. He’s much better than other Audible introducers.

DIFFERENT EDITIONS OF SALEM’S LOT:
If you plan to read the physical book (not the audiobook) I suggest you buy the Illustrated Edition published in 2004 and/or later. It has deleted scenes at the end which are not in the audiobook. Other reviewers liked them. One of those scenes is about a gang of rats in a basement. That was not in this audiobook.

Genre: paranormal suspense

Interesting way to do a story about vampires.

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Would you consider the audio edition of Salem's Lot to be better than the print version?

Never read the print.

If you’ve listened to books by Stephen King before, how does this one compare?

Not as good as Under the Dome, not nearly as large in scale.

Who was the most memorable character of Salem's Lot and why?

Probably Straker. Seems so creepy and the main bad guy is "on screen" so relatively rarely.

Any additional comments?

If I have anything bad to say about this book it's that the beginning is a bit long and it's almost like he rushed the middle and the end. It seems like just when the action is getting going the book is finishing up. King tends to write pretty long books so I was a bit surprised to be in the thick of it and notice only about 2 hours left of play time. Others have noted that there are parts of this book that are downright terrifying and I will wholeheartedly agree with them. When Matt is "alone" in his house I almost had to stop listening as I was walking into my dark apartment alone.

Solid King story

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King at his best. Almost Tarantino style 20 years before Tarantino. Every character has there own importance and time-line, that all intertwine throughout. Amazing depiction of small town gossip, and you really just see the Lot as a living breathing place, where everyone knows everyone. It's probably the most accurate depiction of where I grew up, that I've seen in literature. All the Vampire stuff was pretty on point too. I like those classic rules where crosses, and holy water and faith are the most valuable weapons. Modern Vampire lore keeps taking the religion out of it like it's a bold choice to be a vampire, and "now you just have superpowers" ,instead of being murdered, and doomed to feed off the living and being forsaken.

Maybe My Favorite Book of All Time

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What to say here...I am a writer of horror and enjoy the aspects of the genre. King is a master at his work but I haven’t been a big fan of his writing, it seems contrived or too over done at times. However, I loved the shining but it didn’t make me a King fan. Yet, after reading Salem’s Lot....I am now a King fan. He brought together a wonderful narrative of an old perfect tale of Dracula, put it on its head and spun it round. Absolutely wonderful tradition and gothic Americana vampire fiction.

Going quietly into the dark night to find the sweet.

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The reader was excellent, one of the best I can recall hearing. The story is outstanding and I think I learned some stuff about writing along the way. This is one of my top 3 King novels and I can’t praise this version highly enough.

One of my favorite King story.

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Not my favorite from SK, however it definitely had some very good moments. Great characters, the performance was executed very well. Good story, dont get me wrong. Just not his "best" in my personal opinion. Enjoy!

Chilling moments

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I love this book. I read a physical copy years ago and it was a huge treat to listen to it. The descriptions are stunning, on par with Stoker's Dracula.
I love this book so much.

Gorgeous Descriptions

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Creepy good vampire story loved it not so long that it is a test of endurance like “it “ was even thought I loved that to but a great horror thriller with some good gut wrenching details

Loved it

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