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End of watch stephen king review
End of watch stephen king review











Once upon a time, a dead woman crawled out of Pet Sematary and back into her husband’s life today, the world wide web is where despotism manifests. Not to be cheesy, but love and trust beat evil every time, and King’s river of friendship and fealty runs deep – you need only dip into IT to be reminded of that, while his horror muscle has never been stronger. Finders Keepers, the second story in the trilogy that opened with Mr Mercedes, introduced a supernatural thread that in End of Watch thickens and entwines itself around Hodges and Gibney and their band of allies. Across three volumes he gives free rein to two men who hew to traditional models of the hero and villain but then bust the boundaries by fighting to the death outside the commonplace strictures of crime fiction. This is the power of King’s fecund imagination, that fertile and terrifying thing. The latter, Martine Stover, was paralyzed from the chest down by the Mercedes Killer, and Hartsfield’s quasi-satanic supernatural reach is long and thorny enough that he can make a victim of her a second, and final, time. Scapelli will become End of Watch’s third body, while the first two, whose demise opens the story and reaffirms Hodges’ interest in Hartsfield, are a mother and daughter. Like Hodges, she is certain he is shamming while “living like Donald Trump”, getting massaged and hot-tubbed while his surviving victims contend with nearly unmanageable impairment. Head nurse Ruth Scapelli loathes Hartsfield. (But Hartsfield is no Carrie he destroys solely because he can.) Objects move without being touched, buttons pop open on nurses’ uniforms. The reason for Hartsfield’s official “gork” status is Holly Gibney, Hodges’ partner, who spared a packed arena from Hartsfield’s explosive intentions by felling him with a near-fatal blow to the head – but around the madman there remains an aura of menace and literal instability. Standing in the way of his Jonestown, however, is the indefatigable Bill Hodges, the retired homicide detective (now unlicensed private investigator) who was the first to form the conviction that Hartsfield is malingering inside Room 217 of the Lakes Region Traumatic Brain Injury Clinic. In End of Watch, the conclusion to Stephen King’s stellar Hodges trilogy, mass killer Brady Hartsfield, whose homicidal career began at the wheel of a stolen Mercedes and ended with eight dead and 15 maimed outside a job fair, seeks to remake himself as an architect of suicide, a 21 st century Jim Jones who employs digital devices and forges invisible connections through the ether to make his victims die by their own hand. Suicide is painless, goes the refrain of Johnny Mandel and Mike Altman’s M*A*S*H theme song it brings on many changes.













End of watch stephen king review