![]() ![]() The rest of the book is about how Charlie gets what he prayed for and he also gets a chance to pay it forward in a fantastic world. He does something out of character for himself and prays - he makes a promise that if his family life gets better, he will pay it forward, somehow. The story is about a 17-year-old kid named Charlie, who has a tough family situation and who feels guilt about some ways he has acted out his anger partially due to a bad peer influence. ![]() I tend to be less afraid while reading his books and more fascinated, a bit like the feeling I got from reading Haruki Murakami’s 1Q84.įairy Tale is brand new - it was released last week as of this blog’s writing, on September 6th. I tend to read Stephen King’s books that lean more towards fantasy than horror, but I’ve found that King slips into fantasy more often than not, or his works seem to be more fantastic to me than scary or horrific. ![]() Fairy Tale also reminded me a bit of Duma Key, which starts out with a character who suffers an injury and, a fantastic world henceforth is conjured. ![]() I liked this book a lot right off the bat - this book will probably be up your alley if you liked The Dark Tower series and also The Stand - it’s very tethered to a specific American place (small town Illinois) and moves back and forth between our world in America and a fantastic world, elsewhere. ![]()
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