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Sara. von Stephen King
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Sara. (Original 1998; 1999. Auflage)

von Stephen King (Autor)

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen / Diskussionen
10,965148618 (3.7)2 / 195
Bei dem Versuch, den tragischen Tod seiner Frau zu bewältigen, gerät der erfolgreiche Schriftsteller Michael Noonan in den Bann eines mörderischen Fluchs.
Mitglied:KatharinaWalser
Titel:Sara.
Autoren:Stephen King (Autor)
Info:Heyne (1999)
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek
Bewertung:
Tags:Keine

Werk-Informationen

Sara von Stephen King (1998)

  1. 40
    Glas von Stephen King (beckylynn)
    beckylynn: It's not related to the Dark Tower Series, but I think it's kind of written in the same fashion as Wizard and Glass.......and little bit of a romance theme if you will.
  2. 31
    Love von Stephen King (sturlington)
    sturlington: Very similar themes.
  3. 10
    Hay alguien ahi: El chico que no miraba a los ojos von Jorge Magano (nosoyretro)
  4. 33
    Das Spiel von Stephen King (beckylynn)
    beckylynn: Not exactly a ghost story like Bag of Bones, but thrilling to the end. Starts off fast (however does have sexual content).
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» Siehe auch 195 Erwähnungen/Diskussionen

Five books into my Great Stephen King Re-Read (2024 Edition), this was a novel I was sincerely looking forward to revisiting. Like DESPERATION before it, I remember truly loving this book the first time around.

Unlike my re-read of DESPERATION this one didn't disappoint. I loved this one all over again.

I was amazed at how much of the story I'd forgotten. I had the opening few chapters clearly, but, by the time Noonan got to Sarah Laughs, I'd forgotten damn near all of it. I'm kind of glad I did, as it allowed me to basically re-read it and experience it much like the first time.

There's so much I loved here. The horror was quite subtle for the first three-quarters, allowing King to also examine Noonan's relationships with Jo, with Matty, with her daughter, with the extended family and townspeople, and while I'm sure some readers found it somewhat self-indulgent and "that crazy Stevie overwriting again" I found it essential to how the story played out.

On top of that, King's examination of grief was given the space it needed to breathe, which I appreciated. I find that, in stories, it's given short shrift, making it feel like it's felt and dealt with in a couple of weeks. It felt real here.

The other aspect I loved—and I'm guessing it's something more that authors would respond to—was King's portrayal of Noonan's creative process and the writing process in general. In fact, it was kind of killing me and every time King brought it up, I kept thinking that I should be writing.

Was it a perfect book? No, but very few are. But did King grab me pretty much from the first page and hold me until the last one? Hell yes.

I was going to say this is one of his best "latter year" novels, but looking at my shelves, it's very clearly closer to the middle output. But he was having a fairly solid streak, with the one-two punch of GERALD'S GAME and DOLORES CLAIBORNE, then ROSE MADDER (a book that I feel has been undervalued), then THE GREEN MILE, DESPERATION, and now this one.

But this particular one? This is one I point to when asked why I love Stephen King. ( )
  TobinElliott | Apr 2, 2024 |
(1998)Very good ghost story about a writer who is haunted by his wife and a women raped by ancestors of a local man. (Amazon)No longer content to be the prolific provider of text, King grabs the audio reigns to recount this haunted tale of grief, young love, and otherworldly visits. When 40-year-old bestselling novelist Mike Noonan returns to his lakeside cabin to process his wife's death, he finds the place a beacon for nightmares and ghoulish visits. But there's hope in Kingsville, as this struggling writer falls in love with a young widow named Mattie and her 3-year-old psychic daughter, Kyra. If you've never heard King speak, be warned: 19-plus hours of his western Maine, nasal-drenched tones may be more than some listeners can bear. But there's a certain warmth and believability to King's voice--after all, it's his book and he is a middle-aged bestselling novelist--that jive well with Noonan's character.
  derailer | Jan 25, 2024 |
This is a hard book for me to review. It’s got great creepy atmosphere and the mystery at its heart is fun to unravel. At the same time, it’s a hot mess of disjointed reveals, cartoonish villains, unconvincing romance, and a murderous revenant that I felt more sympathy for than almost any other character. Plus, the author gets unpleasantly meta, with the (author) main character musing on the injustice of fiction writers everywhere killing off their characters as a convenience when they aren’t sure what else to do with them, then… you guessed it. Unlike most SK books, I was ready for this one to be over long before the final pages.

Hardcover version, which has been on my shelf since I bought it brand new in 1998. I’d never written a review, so this is a re-read for the 2018 Halloween Bingo. I’ve decided to use Stephen King for my Wild Card author, but I’m holding onto it for now until I decide where best to play it. ( )
  Doodlebug34 | Jan 1, 2024 |
Stephen King is a master of his craft...that is all. ( )
  MrMet | Apr 28, 2023 |
Fun read. Like a movie.
  kevindern | Apr 27, 2023 |
Violence, natural and supernatural, ensues as past and present mix, culminating in a torrent of climaxes that bind and illuminate the novel's many mysteries. From his mint-fresh etching of spooky rural Maine to his masterful pacing and deft handling of numerous themes, particularly of the fragility of our constructs about reality and of love's ability to mend rifts in those constructs, this is one of King's most accomplished novels.
hinzugefügt von Lemeritus | bearbeitenPublishers Weekly (Aug 31, 1998)
 
From Kirkus Reviews
Leaving Viking for the storied literary patina of Scribner, current or not, King seemingly strives on the page for a less vulgar gloss. And he eases from horror into romantic suspense, while adding dollops of the supernatural. The probable model: structural echoes of Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca do sound forth, although King never writes one paragraph herein to match du Maurier's opening moonscapes of Manderley. What comes through nevertheless is a strong pull to upgrade his style and storytelling in this his 50th year. Yes, he actually does write better if with less energy and power than in Desperation (1996). In fact, attacking the race problem in lily-white Maine, he even assumes an almost Dreiserian seriousness in his final paragraphs. Well, the story: romantic-suspense novelist Michael Noonan, who summers in Castle Rock on Dark Score Lake, falls into a four-year writer's block when his wife Johanna dies of a brain blowout. Now 40 and childless, Mike has salted away four extra novel manuscripts in his safe-deposit box, one of them 11 years old (shades of Richard Bachman!), and keeps up a pretense of productivity by publishing a ``new'' novel each year. Meanwhile, he finds himself falling for Mattie Devore, a widowed mother half his age. Mattie's late husband is the son of still-thriving half-billionaire computer king Max Devore, 85 years old and monstrous, who plans to gain possession of Mattie's three-year-old daughter, the banally drawn Kyra. Mike's first big question: Did Johanna cuckold him during his long hours writing? If so, will her character reverse our understanding of her, as does Rebecca de Winter's? And how can he help Mattie fight off Max and keep Kyra? The supernatural elements, largely reserved for the interracial climax, are Standard King but fairly mild.
hinzugefügt von kthomp25 | bearbeitenKirkus Reviews
 
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Epigraph (Motto/Zitat)
Ja, Bartleby, sagte ich mir, bleibe du hinter deinem Wandschirm. Ich werde dich nicht länger verfolgen. Du bist harmlos und still wie einer dieser alten Stühle hier. Kurz, ich fühle mich nie so zu Hause, wie wenn ich weiß, dass du hier bist. - "Bartleby", Herman Melville
Gestern nacht träumte ich, ich sei wieder in Manderley. (...)
Wie ich da still, mit verhaltenem Atem stand, hätte ich schwören können, das Haus sei nicht bloß eine leere Schale, sondern belebt und beseelt, wie es früher gelebt hatte. - "Rebecca", Daphne du Maurier
Der Mars ist der Himmel. - Ray Bradbury
Widmung
Dieses Buch ist für Naomi. Immer noch.
Erste Worte
An einem sehr heißen Tag im August 1994 sagte mir meine Frau, dass sie zur Rite-Aid-Drogerie von Derry runtergehen und sich das Mittel gegen ihre Nebenhöhlenentzündung auf ihr Wiederholungsrezept holen würde - ich glaube, mittlerweile kann man das Zeug im freien Verkauf bekommen.
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Wikipedia auf Englisch (2)

Bei dem Versuch, den tragischen Tod seiner Frau zu bewältigen, gerät der erfolgreiche Schriftsteller Michael Noonan in den Bann eines mörderischen Fluchs.

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Buchbeschreibung
Seit dem Unfalltod seiner Frau Johanna leidet der Bestsellerautor Michael Noonan an einer vollständigen Schreibblockade. Mehrere Jahre lang füttert er sein Publikum mit Werken aus der Schublade, dann geht ihm das Material aus. Um seine Schreibhemmung endlich zu überwinden, zieht er sich auf sein Sommerhaus ›Sara Lacht‹ in Maine zurück. Dort, wo er mit Jo so viele glückliche Tage verbracht hat, hofft er, die Erinnerungen bewältigen zu können, die ihn in letzter Zeit in immer lebhafteren Träumen und Alpträumen plagen, und endlich über den schrecklichen Verlust hinwegzukommen. Doch in dem Haus geschehen seltsame, unheimliche Dinge, und Noonans Träume bewahrheiten sich auf beängstigende Weise. Ein Fluch scheint auf dem Sommerhaus zu liegen. Oder hängen diese mysteriösen Vorfälle in irgendeiner Weise mit dem Verschwinden der schwarzen Jazzsängerin Sara Tidwell zusammen, von der das Haus seinen Namen hat?
Zusammenfassung in Haiku-Form

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