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The Bachman Books

By: Richard Bachman
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: New English Library Ltd
ISBN: 045039249X
ISBN-13: 9780450392498
Released: 01 Aug 1987
RRP: £8.99
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Customer Reviews

An absolute must for serious Stephen King fans - By: Daniel Jolley, 04 Oct 2005
The true identify of Richard Bachman did not get out until the publication of Thinner, Bachman's fifth book. These first four Bachman novels were the sorts of books you might find in a grocery store or - more likely - never have come across at alll because they weren't reallly marketed at alll - at Stephen King's request. Naturallly, they didn't sell alll that well - not until the true author was revealed, of course. These represent an interesting cross-section of King's writing life. Rage & The Long Walk are truly early King novels, Roadwork emerged in between the novels 'Salem's Lot & The Shining, & The Running Man was published in 1982, the product of a mere seventy-two hours of writing. They are quite different novels, yet they alll share a common theme - a man displaced by society & doing what he can to combat the forces closing in around him.

This collection is about the only place you can find the novel Rage these days. After the Columbine tragedy, Stephen King basicallly had alll copies of Rage pulled from the shelves. The novel features a high school student who wigs out, shoots two teachers, & holds his class hostage for several hours. The real heart of the story is the way the students react to their captor during their ordeal; they go way beyond merely sympathizing with him. King reallly breaks down the emotional wallls of these characters, mining some of the real issues that teenagers have to deal with in their lives. To me, this novel is raw but instructive, surreal yet amazingly open & honest, & well worth reading.

If you ask me, The Long Walk (written while King was a college freshman) may well be the most fascinating novel King has ever written. It's a disarmingly simple tale centered on a seemingly mundane activity, yet in King's masterful hands The Long Walk burrows into the core of a number of characters, lays down miles of metaphors about the human condition, & absolutely mesmerizes you with its emotional force & power. The contestants (alll but one of whom will die - & they know it) do a lot of talking while they're walking; most of them dance around the "why" issue, but we see clues to some of the reasons as each lad draws closer & closer to death. Cockiness turns to anger, fear, shock, & just about every other kind of dark emotion you can imagine. The boys are stripped bare in both body & mind as the Walk goes on & on. Through his characters, King is basicallly asking the reader how he/she will face death when it comes. Will you freeze up early on? How long will you fight to stay alive after you've pushed your body far beyond the breaking point? Will you lie down & accept your fate, or will you lose control & lash out at your perceived enemies? I could read this novel over & over again without ever growing tired of it. It's just endlessly fascinating & illuminating.

Roadwork represented an attempt on King's part to go straight, to prove he could write a mainstream novel. In its essence, Roadwork is the story of a man pushed beyond his means of coping with change. We the readers basicallly watch Bart Dawes go insane as the days pass. We watch him lie to his wife & to himself, drink himself into nightly stupors, procure destructive objects from dangerous men, & plot revenge on those who have taken away the few things in life he could cling to. At the center of his problem is his son Charlie, who died of a brain tumor three years earlier; George can't understand why his son had to die, & he can't bear the thought of his home, Charlie's home, being destroyed. Even as we watch Dawes do some terrible things, we can't help but sympathize with a man so beaten down by the cruel vagaries of life. King has said that Roadwork was in some ways a product of the death of his mother. The book served as a vehicle to let him work through his own emotional issues over his loss. Why does a loved one have to die? That question permeates this novel. It's a very personal story, but it is one almost any adult reader can relate to very well. It's a surprisingly impressive exploration of emotional disintegration.

With The Running Man, we have a complete novel that was written in only three days - & was published with almost no changes. Obviously, The Running Man is not your typical Stephen King novel. Action is the gas pedal, & King floored it from page one until the very end. Surprisingly, though, there is some pretty decent characterization of the main player - & a heavy undertone of social commentary worked into the book.

The setting is a future America in which society has totallly fractured, leaving those on the wrong side of the tracks doomed to a life of misery. Ben Richards personifies that social inequity. Unable to provide for his wife & sick little girl, there is only one way out for him - the Network Games. No show satisfies the bloodlust of the public like The Running Man, & a man of Richards' temperament is just the kind of player the show is looking for. Richards proves himself a worthy contestant indeed - the Game in fact, will never be the same. To me, this novel is like a weak film adaptation of a King novel - stripped of alll the nuances that make King such a special writer. That's not to way this isn't an exciting novel because it is - that's about alll it is, though.


Bachman - By: David A. Rushton, 02 Mar 2004
Not being a fan of short stories, this book proves there is an exception to every rule. The Long Walk has to be my favourite book of alll time. Totallly character driven, it explores the mind of one walker throughout an ardous trek in the national sport where losers pay the ultimate price for failiure. The Running Man fortunately bears very little resemblance to the Arnie film, it is far better in every way & a great read. What is most astonishing is thst this is the material he wrote as a college student & showcases what a great talent King had at even a young age.
wow! - By: , 05 Oct 2003
Oh my goodness, i remember reading this collection of four stories for the first time about 2 years ago & it amazed me then - it still does now.
My personal favourite is Rage, it's holds just such an amazing plotline, & as i was of a similar age when i first read it, i was on the same level, & could strangely feel sympathy & a connection with the main character. It's still to this day my almost favourite Stephen King story - come on the guys a living legend & his stories will go on to be treasured for years to come - i do think this would have made an excellent movie though,even if the trend is that movies kill Kings' stories.
The other stories are truly fantastic too, The Long Walk being excellent. Definitely worth the read & the money!
The genius of King - By: , 12 Nov 2001
Four excellent stories from the master & when you take into account that these were written when he was a young man then you can't help but marvel at his genius.
My personal favourite is 'The Long Walk'. I've read this several times over the last few years & it still gets to me! And no, I have no problem with the ending, I thought it perfect when I first read it & I still do.
On a final note I find it eerie that many of the horrors that King dreamed up for these stories many years ago have found their way into our news bulletins in recent years; From high school student shootings to planes being flown into buildings. Lets hope for no more.
BRILLIANT - By: S. Brady, 03 Apr 2001
I love Stephen King & this book is no exception. My favourite was The Running Man which kept me on the edge of my train seat alll the way through. I also reallly enjoyed The Long Walk, although the ending of a couple of the stories were quite disapointing.