Stephen King’s Dr.
Sleep picks up many years after the end of the The
Shining. After years of emotional torment stemming from his experiences at
the Overlook Hotel, Danny Torrance finds himself without a home, without a
purpose, and in an alcoholic induced oblivion. In a last gasp effort, he
settles down in New Hampshire and looks for redemption. This redemption comes
in a similar form to that Father Callahan finds once he joins the Dark Tower
series.
Danny is haunted, not only be the mysteries of his
childhood, but also by the demons of his not so distant past, one that caught
up with him after one to many one night stands and awkward mornings. Thus we
track Danny’s odyssey through redemption, his adherence to AA mantra, and his
mysterious role as Dr. Sleep at a Hospice, where, for he makes use of his
shining in order to allow souls to pass from one world to the next. In a way,
this section of the narrative passes as one would expect. This is not say it is
cliché or uninteresting, but the series of events leads us to find Danny as we
would want to: a respectable citizen living in a respectable, albeit
supernatural, manner.
Built into this tale comes the True Knot, a group of spirit
vampires who derive their immortality by sucking away the souls of children who
shine. They have tremendous psychic ability themselves, ranging from the power
of suggestion to sleep induction to shining location. The transverse the United
States looking for souls to feed on while living off of their tremendous
wealth. Thus they are the evil, killing kids and filling papers and police
departments with missing persons data. Yet, they are wasting away, the souls of
the shining, or steam, have waned over the years, and so have their backup
stores.
It is pitted against
this need for food where Danny, now Dan, is given the opportunity to stand as a
protector, to fight back and seek redemption for his ills while overcoming the
events of his childhood. He can either revert to the visage that was his father
or grow into a new, more powerful man, one capable of eliminating an evil and
saving a little girl, one who shines far brighter than even he, Abra Stone.
King, as always, writes a strong narrative, and the narrative pulls you
through.
Abra is a believable teen, but her emotions are not always
as strong as one would expect—she is in fact too grounded at times. Andi, who
is giving an entire early chapter to be both introduced and then inducted to
the True Knot, is underutilized. Here is a woman who can put you to sleep with
a single whisper and after her introduction, she becomes a flat character with
a casual mention. One would have thought she would play a larger, more crucial
role in the narrative. Similarly, the True Knot faces a crisis, yet
how long has such an event been in coming and why? The problem comes off as
almost manufactured, almost out of nowhere, and perhaps too simple for a group
of such power. As the narrative progresses, Dan stands tall, as one would
expect, and he faces his demons, giving a thrilling, page turning tale that
King fans should enjoy.
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