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Rose Madder by  Stephen King - First Edition - 1995 - from GuthrieBooks.com and Biblio.com
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Rose Madder

by King, Stephen

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Price: $5.99

  • Bookseller: GuthrieBooks.com US (US)
  • Bookseller Inventory #: 003028
  • Format/binding: Cloth
  • Book condition: Fine
  • Jacket condition: Near Fine
  • Quantity available: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • ISBN 10: 0670858692
  • ISBN 13: 9780670858699
  • Publisher: Viking Adult
  • Place: New York, New York, U.S.A.
  • Date published: 1995
  • Size: 6.75 x 9.75 x 1.75 inches
  • Weight: 1.7 pounds
  • Keywords: FICTION HORROR MCCLENDON ROSE FICTITIOUS

Book Description

New York, New York, U.S.A.: Viking Adult. Cloth. 0670858692 After 14 years of being beaten, Rose Daniels wakes up one morning and leaves her husband -- but she keeps looking over her shoulder, because Norman has the instincts of a predator. And what is the strange work of art that has Rose in a kind of spell? In this brilliant dark-hued fable of the gender wars, Stephen King has fashioned yet another suspense thriller to keep readers right at the edge. From Publishers Weekly Relentlessly paced and brilliantly orchestrated, this cat-and-mouse game of a novel is one of King's most engrossing and topical horror stories. At the center of the action is heroine Rose McClendon, a battered wife who starts life anew by leaving her police officer husband, a consummately cruel man depicted by King as a paragon of evil. Crowded with character and incident, the novel builds to a nearly apocalyptic conclusion that combines the best of King's long novels?the breadth of vision of The Stand, for example?with the focused plot and careful psychological portraiture of Dolores Claiborne. The story of Rose's joyous growth from tortured wife (her persecution gruesomely but realistically portrayed) to independent woman alternates with the terrifying details of her husband's deliberate pursuit to create unflagging tension. The book is a phantasmagorical roller-coaster ride, peopled by a broad array of indelibly characterized men and women and fueled by an air of danger that is immediate and overwhelming. 1.75 million first printing; BOMC main selection; simultaneous Penguin Audio; paperback sale to Signet. Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. From School Library Journal Stephen King moves from supernaturally frightful subjects into the real world of terror. This heroine has been systematically abused (mentally, physically, and sexually) for 14 years of marriage. As the book begins, Rose is finally escaping her husband, a truly psychotic cop, and is starting a new life in another city. The suspense comes from wondering when he will finally catch up with her and talk to her "up real close," his verbal prelude to physical punishment for every perceived wrongdoing. The book is full of graphic language and acts and may be all too real for some YAs. But those readers who have enjoyed King's past books will not be disappointed by this one. Though he doesn't frighten, he does create tension in the chase, demonstrating just how mad this husband is. As the final conflict occurs, though, the author emphasizes the strength one can find in oneself by having Rose (with the aid of a painting that comes to life) vanquish Norman herself. Unfortunately, very few victims of abuse in today's world have access to supernatural paintings.?William Byrd, W.T. Woodson High School, Fairfax, VA Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Library Journal The king of suspense delivers the story of a woman on the run from her husband, a vicious cop who will stop at nothing to find her. With the 1.75 million-copy first printing, plenty of books will be available for the on-sale date of June 26. Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. From AudioFile After Rose Daniels flees her abusive husband her first job is narrating audiobooks, a coincidence that will intrigue listeners, but might have less impact in print. Rose's voice is wonderful as her employer points out--soft, silky and dynamic. Blair Brown projects this, as well as Rose's hesitancy, fear, growing self-confidence, then fear again as she's tracked down by Norman, her brutal cop husband. Stephen King reads the chapters in which Norman narrates and, unfortunately his nasal voice is just not believable as the foul-mouthed sadist. King intrudes with his narrative and snaps the listener out of the immersion Brown fosters. The long program is nicely cued, and good electronic sound adds to the tension. With so many cassettes, better packaging is a must, even for an individual listener. R.F.W. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. From Booklist One gift that distinguishes King from other horror writers is his knack for and dedication to creating convincing female protagonists who are more than stock damsels in distress, like feisty Dolores Claiborne in the novel, arguably King's best, that bears her name, or this book's Rose McClendon Daniels. Rose is the abused wife of sadistic cop Norman Daniels. We meet her in a typical King grab-'em-and-shock-'em prologue, just as she's beginning to suffer a miscarriage brought on by Norman's latest beating. The main action begins when Rose finally walks out of the 14-year hell of her marriage. Dazed and ignorant of the regular world, she finds a battered women's shelter 800 miles from home, starts an independent life, and even meets a decent man, a pawn shop operator from whom she buys a strange painting. Of course, Norman, gone--as a King character might say--round the bend and ballistic, is tracking her down, maiming and murdering every informer and obstructor he can along the way. The expected bloody showdown climaxes the yarn, but not until King invokes the supernatural--the painting, of course, and its inhabitant, whom Rose dubs Rose Madderto help his heroine. This time, the tactic seems strained and unnecessary; Dolores Claiborne needed only a dash of the uncanny to get out of her predicament, and Rose McClendon, bolstered by her shelter cohort, seems equal to Norman without the assistance of weird artwork. That judgment, however, is something with which King's millions of readers will want to concur or dissent after their own reading. Ray Olson Midwest Book Review After enduring fourteen years of an abusive marriage, Rose takes flight for a new identity and life free from her husband; but Norman is pathologically driven to injure, and can't bear the thought of his wife's flight. Thus begins a tense thriller in which hunter and hunted find their worlds transformed. Book Description This is the story of Rose Daniels, "the most richly portrayed female King's ever created."* Escaping from her macabre marriage is not as easy as fleeing to a new city, picking a new name, finding a new job, and lucking out with a new man. Not with a husband like Norman... - Condition: clean, tight, crisp nearly perfect except for owner's name on first free endpaper. . Fine. 1995.

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