Here’s the question:
What are some of the most amazing chapters you’ve ever read? Chapters that stand apart from all the rest and stick in your mind forever. The book doesn’t even have to be that good to have one of these in it, that’s for sure. Case in point…
Recently, I read Peter Straub and Stephen King’s follow up to the wonderful The Talisman, called Black House. It’s not a terrible book, to say the least, but there are things about it that I really don’t like. First is the annoying narrative. It sounds like a polite Alex from A Clockwork Orange. It just doesn’t work for me. Second is the irritating way King has of spending too much time focusing on the streets and alleys of townships. I get bored after 100 pages of descriptive narration of what the damn town looks like. Get on with the story and characters already! Even with those gripes, I liked the book. It blends The Dark Tower story arch within its world and they fit pretty nicely. I never tire of learning more about the struggle to keep all the worlds alive by keeping the Crimson King at bay. All things serve the beam, right?
Anyway, there’s a chapter where a small biker gang goes in search of the evil, and hidden, Black House. The house is in the woods off of a rural highway and keeps its way hidden from human eyes…unless it wants another tasty morsel and allows someone to see. Unfortunately, it doesn’t want these cool bikers to find it and proceeds to kick their asses even before they pull into the drive. The house is alive with the Crimson King’s malice, and they way Straub and King translate this awareness is something I’ll never forget. A raven named Gorg, a phantom Hell Hound with eyes of fire and acid drool, and the Black House itself, always a blur of ever-changing shapes and power that looks like heat waves…it’s some damn cool writing. It’s a pretty good book with a perfect haunted house chapter.
Another, and my last, example is a chapter in Anne Rice’s The Interview with the Vampire. It’s a story arch completely abandoned by Rice and Neil Jordan for the film, which I personally think is a mistake because it would’ve translated brilliantly. This chapter has to do with an epiphany Louis has about God and the immortality of Vampires. In it, he decides one evening that he cannot accept everything Lestat tells him about the nature of Vampires at face value. So, in an effort to learn the truth, he walks into a Catholic church to see for himself the power it may have over him, which turns out to be none. He has a vision of him standing in the center of the church and it decaying and crumbling to dust all around him. He sees that he is more immortal than religion itself and that the silly beliefs of man has no power whatsoever over him. Whether there is a God or not is still open to debate, but God is not man, and man has nothing on him. The way it’s described is incredible. I could see his vision as if it were my very own, and because of that, I could almost feel the immortality and godlikeness that Louis feels at that moment. Great, great stuff.
So, if I haven’t bored you to tears so far, and you’ve gotten to this point (or just noticed a tiny end sentence and decided it might be worth reading), then try to describe single chapters that just blew you away.
What are some of the most amazing chapters you’ve ever read? Chapters that stand apart from all the rest and stick in your mind forever. The book doesn’t even have to be that good to have one of these in it, that’s for sure. Case in point…
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Anyway, there’s a chapter where a small biker gang goes in search of the evil, and hidden, Black House. The house is in the woods off of a rural highway and keeps its way hidden from human eyes…unless it wants another tasty morsel and allows someone to see. Unfortunately, it doesn’t want these cool bikers to find it and proceeds to kick their asses even before they pull into the drive. The house is alive with the Crimson King’s malice, and they way Straub and King translate this awareness is something I’ll never forget. A raven named Gorg, a phantom Hell Hound with eyes of fire and acid drool, and the Black House itself, always a blur of ever-changing shapes and power that looks like heat waves…it’s some damn cool writing. It’s a pretty good book with a perfect haunted house chapter.
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So, if I haven’t bored you to tears so far, and you’ve gotten to this point (or just noticed a tiny end sentence and decided it might be worth reading), then try to describe single chapters that just blew you away.
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"Today, war is too important to be left to politicians. They have neither the time, the training, nor the inclination for strategic thought. I can no longer sit back and allow Communist infiltration, Communist indoctrination, Communist subversion and the international Communist conspiracy to sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids."
"Today, war is too important to be left to politicians. They have neither the time, the training, nor the inclination for strategic thought. I can no longer sit back and allow Communist infiltration, Communist indoctrination, Communist subversion and the international Communist conspiracy to sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids."