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(Mass Market Paperback)
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| Available in eBook | $6.39 |
| Compact Disc - Unabridged | $47.45 |
This is the story of Rose Daniels, "the most richly portrayed female King's ever created."* Escape from her macabre marriage is not as easy as fleeing to a new city, picking a new name, finding a new job, and lucking out with a new man. Not with a husband like Norman...
Stephen King's national bestseller Rose Madder is the haunting story of a housewife who flees her abusive husband. She runs, thinking she is free. She's wrong--dead wrong.
Rose Madder is rarely dull. It builds to a vivid climax. . . . In Rose Madder Mr. King has a rousing story when he needs one and when he doesn't.
More Reviews and RecommendationsFew authors have tapped into our secret fears as adeptly as Stephen King, Master of the Macabre and one of the most widely read novelists writing today. With his trademark blend of fantasy, horror, and psychological suspense, this prolific and immensely popular contemporary writer continues to remind us that evil is still a potent force in the world.
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April 13, 2009: Rose Madder is the story of the abused wife of a policeman who escapes to a new life. She was ripe for that kind of marriage because of her loss of family while in her teens. Predictably, her husband, Norm came from a background with an abusive father and unemotional mother. After her escape, Rose lucked into a job as, of all things, an audio book reader. The rest of the book takes you through Rose's progress in becoming a real person and the various ups and downs of her journey. All the while, there is the threat of Norm finding her and talking to her right up close (his term for physically abusing her). The climactic end came about nine tenths of way through, with the death of Norm at the hands of the supernatural, but continued on after that, leaving the reader with some vague questions and disappointments.
I listened to the unabridged audio version of Rose Madder. The story is compelling, and King writes from the perspective of several characters, as he has done so well in the past, and mainly from the female protagonist's view. In "Lisey's Story" he succeeded beautifully in communicating the female psyche to the reader. I felt that Rose Daniels fell a bit short in "Rose Madder." Overall, I didn't feel that the characters were as well drawn as King has done in the past, except for Norm Daniels, who went completely off the deep edge early on in the book.I wish I had read the paper version instead of the audio, since I didn't care for the female reader's (Blair Brown) interpretation of the book. To my ear, she made Rose come off as a bit one dimensional, prudish, stodgy and slightly uninteresting. King's reading of Norm, on the other hand was riveting and deep. As audio book listeners know, a reader can make or break a book. King is, in my opinion, an excellent writer and I will continue to read (or listen to) everything he produces. I liked this book, I liked the story, the characteristic King movement from the familiar to the bizarre, but I found some atypical flaws in this one that might not have appeared in the paper version. Nevertheless I would recommend it to those who love Stephen King.I Also Recommend: Lisey's Story.
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March 07, 2009: I read this book my senior year of high school, have to say it was the first book by Stephen King I'd read. Its capitivating, thrilling and escapism.I give this book also 10/10 for its intrigueness.