Add one more the annoyed-by-the-ending boat.
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Add one more the annoyed-by-the-ending boat.
I liked Cell well enough...it did kind of remind me of Tommyknockers though. And I watched The Happening the other day and that kind of reminded me of Cell.
Cell was actually the first non-DT Stephen King book I read.
Bought it at a vacation because there were nothing to do there other than sitting at the pool or beach all day.
The beginning was great, maybe one of the best parts of any books I've read. It "failed" a little towards the end, but I do love the book. :)
Love me some M Night Shyamalan, but I totally felt like he ripped off Cell when he made the Happening.
I agree, somewhat frustrating lack of closure, but until everyone mentioned it here, it hadn't bothered me so much. Kind of like when you don't realize you're hungry until you smell the steak on the neighbor's grill.
I loved the first half of it. Mainly because I devour post-apocolyptic books like they were candy.
But at the point where things started becoming super-natural, I got bored. And at the end, where the "changed?" were literally floating along the road, I kept putting the book down to avoid throwing it across the room. :onfire:
I must say I agree with everything Booger just said.
I liked the supernatural part of it, actually found it supernatural to begin with. I mean, people going bat crazy like that from cell phones ain't exactly everyday life events.
I liked the book, found it refreshing with good old fashioned King horror after the fine, but non-eventful The Colorado Kid.
which reminds me... gotta pick it up and finish it some day... if it isn't too much to ask of an elderly bear
even though it is not a dt based book, i think it does have a link to the dark tower universe...the guy is an artist and the descriptions of the artwork he did sounds alot like pics from the gunslinger born comics.
I have finished Cell, and now have to say that I liked it a lot. I was bored to death with the beginning - about a third of it - because nothing was happening, except some fussing around; the only thing bears find worth reading about is what happens inside people's souls, and in Cell the characters didn't develop, and, in fact, weren't characters at all - just some hurriedly drawn stick figures (with the single possible exception of Tom, who was at least to some extent tangible). Then I came to think of it, if you pardon the catachresis, as of a very long short story rather than a short novel, and it became more bearable, although still very boring.
It became definitely better after new characters were introduced, although the theoretic part they brought in - hard drives and all - was definitely sophomoric (had the professor suffered some brain damage we didn't know anything about, which put him on the same level of analytic ability as his 12-year-old student?), but at least something started happening, and not in the dull, linear way it had been happening during the first third of the book.
At last, after Alice (an embodyment of a stick-figure) died, everything was just excellent. I loved the rest of the book dearly, and, by the way, am perfectly satisfied with the ending.
WOOHOO!!
I am so glad you ended up liking it Jean--it is so much more about social aspects than Zombies to me.
But still a very shallow read--fun sometimes.
I'm glad you finally finished it, and enjoyed it.
I definitely found it to be a very fun read.
I loved Cell. I liked the similarity to The Stand, and I liked the pacing of it. I found it quite a disturbing book, really. Also, I actually liked the open ending; it made me use my imagination. ^+^
I've read it two years ago, and I liked it! Just as Jean, for me the interesting thing is what happens in people's minds and soul, and the way people get to know each other, and how something terrible can turn total strangers in to friends. The idea of the Pulse was great too! In our days, people can't imagine a life without cellphones, and the idea of something that toast your brain through e cellphone is so nice! Hm, yep!
Yes, the book is very similar to The Stand! I didn't know that, because I read the Stand after Cell. When I compare them, I think that Cell is really something like a modern version of The Stand. That's cool in some way.
The bottom line is, that for me, this was a very interesting and dynamic story! A lot of action going on!
Also, the end was fine for me! I've never read what King posted on his site. Does someone have a link?
this is the only book by king that i have hated. i found myslef only finishing just to finish. i felt it was honestly a waist if my life to read it.
I had the hardest time getting through the opening 50 pages of this book. When it first came out I bought it and read in about 25-30 pages and set it down in irritation. It was just too frantic and mostly I read to relax, right? Anyways I finally decided to give it a shot and still it took me two or three days to get through the first chapter, after that I read teh rest in about five hours, mostly in one sitting. It was like I just wanted to get it over with.I LOVE zombie movies and have seen literally dozens, and I don't own or use a Cellular phone, so I should love this one. But I don't. It was good fun, sure, but the characters were mostly hollow and I seriously could not stand all the mentions of Sharon and Johnny Gee. Gag me with a spoon. That he actually reunited with either of them at the end was a huge disappointment. Where's the King of Pet Sematary, unafraid of just letting the bad stuff out permanently?
I didn't buy the whole telepathy telekinesis angle either. Pretty thinly stretched premise. Anyways. As a speed reader hybrid of The Stand and Dawn of the Dead, it was alright. As an entry into the horror fiction canon, well, I think not.
The worst part though has to be the tagline on my dust cover:
There's a reason cell rhymes with hell.
That is the worst extraneous text I've ever seen on a King jacket and I can't believe more than one person thought it was fit to print.
I would send out a global text to my phonebook not to answer their phone........then I'd go into full combat mode.
I'd send a global text telling people to answer immediately...just cause I want the zombies to come. :evil:
Jean, I don't remember that tagline on the book either. I wonder what edition it was.:orely: Kronz?
It's the first line on the inside flap of the American hardcover from Scribner.
Wow, that must have just been so bad my brain refused to register it as existing on the same frequency as the rest of the book.
I voted kill them...
Well... i would become a zombie in the first moment :wtf:
I always have my cellphone with me :cool:
Nonno, the worst part has to be the end.... ALL THE #$%&/ END! The telepathy, the hive mind, the line for the phone.... ALL!