[DEV SITE] - CBR16 TESTING AND DEVELOPMENT

Search This Site

| Log in
  1. Follow us on Facebook
  2. Follow us on Twitter
  3. Follow us on Instagram
  4. Follow us on Goodreads
  5. RSS Feeds

  • Home
  • About
    • About CBR
    • Getting Started
    • FAQ
    • CBR Book Club
    • Fan Mail
    • AlabamaPink
  • Our Team
    • Leaderboard
    • The CBR Team
    • Recent Comments
    • CBR Interviews
    • Our Volunteers
    • Meet MsWas
  • Categories
    • Genres
    • Tags
    • Star Ratings
  • Fight Cancer
    • How We Fight Cancer
    • Donating to Cannonball Read, Inc.
    • CBR Merchandise
    • Supporters and Friends of CBR
  • Contact
    • Contact Form
    • Newsletter Sign Up
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Follow Us

Starring Kojak, formerly known as Big Steve, a Very Good Dog

May 15, 2016 by borisanne 10 Comments

The Stand

My blossoming love affair with Stephen King continues, with yet another behemoth of awesomeness: The Stand.

This particular edition was released in 1990, twelve years after the first release. It was updated and expanded, and I have no reference to the first edition but, according to “Publisher’s Weekly,” at least as quoted on amazon.com, “The same excellent tale of the walking dude, the chemical warfare weapon called superflu and the confrontation between its survivors has been updated to 1990, so references to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, the Reagan years, Roger Rabbit and AIDS are unnecessarily forced into the mouths of King’s late-’70s characters.”

But if you’re asking me, nothing felt forced (though there is the same repeated quick exposition that I noted as vaguely annoying when I reviewed It… Yeah, I get it, Stephen: Glen is bald, and was a sociologist before the superflu epidemic… I HEARD YOU THE FIRST 850 PAGES!), and honestly, the reasons King gives for revisiting the text for a re-release (too long to quote here, but worth reading in the Preface when you pick up the book) feel right to me, and I appreciated all of the supposedly-extra color and flavor as part and parcel of the story-telling that carried me through. Maybe he does have “diarrhea of the word processor.” Maybe I’m into that.

The Stand is an epic. It’s basically an Ur-text for lots of what’s popular right now, and so important and successful in what it tries to accomplish. Without its success, I think the face of pop culture would be different today. Off the cuff without touching The Almighty Internet, I would say that “The Walking Dead” (and probably even more so, “Fear the Walking Dead”) and “The Last Man on Earth” owe their existences to the creative foundation that this book establishes; the phrase “the walking dead,” actually appears several times in the book, and there was a scene in TLMOE that is straight-up lifted out of Stu and Frannie’s journey.

Right, so Stu and Frannie. And Larry, and Glen, and Harold, and Nadine, and Joe/Leo, and Trashcan Man, and Lloyd, and The Walking Dude, and Nick, and Tom, and Lucy, and Sue, and Ralph, and Mother Abagail, et freaking al. This is a story of MANY people, all affected by a superflu epidemic that sweeps the earth. King hones in on America, which is certainly focusing in, but still is a very wide angle. There’s a lot of story, and he starts just before the epidemic begins, following all of these individual stories and their overlap for a full year.

It’s enormous, and thorough, and suspenseful, spooky on a number of levels: while reading it, I found it scary to be on the subway with coughing people, and also scary to be in the dark near un-shaded windows. It’s a story of human failure and hubris, and also of good and evil. The beginning is very believable, and so what follows becomes conceivable. This is, as I’ve said, my second King novel ever, and I’m deeply interested in the fact that in both books the incredibly terrifying Bad is balanced by an undeniable Good.

Bonus in The Stand: there is a Very Good Dog. And basically, I don’t ever want anything else.

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: CBR8, colorado, devil, end of civilization, evil, farmland, flu, germ warfare, god, good, horror, imp, journey, King, Las Vegas, lincoln tunnel, maine, new york, nightmares, science, society, sociology, Stephen King, superflu, Suspense

About borisanne

CBR 8
CBR  9

She reads. She sort of writes. She hikes with the dog. She watches TV. She cooks and bakes like a champ. View borisanne's reviews»

Comments

  1. ingres77 says

    May 15, 2016 at 6:15 pm

    Excellent review.

    It’s been years since I’ve read this, but I should probably give it another go. It’s probably my favorite of his after The Dead Zone.

    Log in to Reply
    • borisanne says

      May 17, 2016 at 10:32 am

      Thanks!! I’ll add The Dead Zone to my list as well!!!

      Log in to Reply
  2. Scootsa1000 says

    May 15, 2016 at 7:28 pm

    Awesome. I really want to make time for a re-read this summer. It’s been way too long since I had a little Larry Underwood in my life.

    Log in to Reply
    • borisanne says

      May 17, 2016 at 10:32 am

      Do it!

      Log in to Reply
  3. narfna says

    May 16, 2016 at 12:10 pm

    I’m starting this later this week! Eeeep. So I haven’t read your review but wanted to comment anyway because I’m excited and scared.

    Log in to Reply
    • Scootsa1000 says

      May 16, 2016 at 12:21 pm

      I am so jealous of you for getting to experience this for the first time. I hope you love it.

      I can’t wait for Bunnybean to read it (is that a weird parenting decision on my part?) so that we can talk about our most favorite and least favorite characters, and what choices Uncle Stevie made that were awesome and what was less than awesome.

      I’m definitely pushing it to the top of my audible queue and hope to start it within the next week. I hope I love it as much now as I always have, but I have to assume I will.

      Log in to Reply
      • narfna says

        May 16, 2016 at 12:29 pm

        I will be able to more definitively tell you whether it’s weird after I’ve read it ;) But my instinct is to say yes, because Uncle Stevie gets weird sometimes and I barely feel prepared for it as a thirty-one year old woman.

        Log in to Reply
        • borisanne says

          May 17, 2016 at 10:36 am

          I say good instinct, because when my folks put the kibosh on all things Stephen King for me, that meant MANY LONG YEARS of just not getting it, you know? Even if she gets scared, or if there are questions about sex (I almost said something in my review about how hetero-fricking-normative The Free Zone is, and how the only hint of deviance is also OF COURSE homosexual, and OF COURSE violence and rapey. OF COURSE.), or whatever, you got it. Worth it!!

          Log in to Reply
  4. baxlala says

    May 16, 2016 at 9:08 pm

    Loved this review! It super made me want to reread The Stand, which I haven’t read in years and years.

    Log in to Reply
    • borisanne says

      May 17, 2016 at 10:36 am

      Do it, do it, do it. I’m already looking forward to a re-read, because now I want to meet these characters knowing what I know now, you know?

      Log in to Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Recent Comments

  • Mswas Administrator
    on CBR Diversions: Holiday Season –Time To Give BOOKS
    can i make this comment
  • Emmalita
    on CBR Diversions: Holiday Season –Time To Give BOOKS
    Leaving a comment! As scheduled
  • Rochelle
    on CBR Diversions: Holiday Season –Time To Give BOOKS
    Great review
  • sam
    on Admin test of non book review
    another one
  • fred
    on Admin test of non book review
    subscriptin test
See More Recent Comments »

Want to Help Out?

CBR has a great crew of volunteers, and we're always looking for more people to help out. If you have a specialty or are willing to learn, drop MsWas a line.

  • Donate
  • Shop
  • Volunteers
  • CBR11 Final Standings
  • AlabamaPink
  • FAQ
  • Contact

You can donate to CBR via:

  1. PayPal
  2. Venmo
  3. Google Pay

Copyright © 2026 · Minimum Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in