Stephen King Fans discussion

This topic is about
Elevation
Talk about the Novels
>
Elevation


Discuss Elevation here. Please mark all spoilers for those who are also reading the book this month.


Kandice wrote: "I am quite irritated because I pre-ordered it months ago and usually get pre-ordered books on the day they are released. Maybe the next day. This one says it will be delivered tomorrow."
Who did you order it from? Amazon always ships it before it is released and I receive it the day it was released.
Earlier this year I pre-ordered a book from Barnes and Noble and it shipped on the day it was released and it arrived three days after it was released. It was very annoying when you are used to getting it on the day it is released.


Every time I order a book (even non pre-orders) it takes up to a week. I have their membership and have the free shipping. I wonder if free shipping equates to slowest shipping method possible, LOL.
I do better if I order online and pick up in store. It’s ready in less than an hour. I get the lower price as well.



I dont agree with you at all. I was a smaller book yes but as his last two books were like tomes I'm fine with that. Honestly i felt it was pretty refreshing to read it. It gave me more feels in its 146 pages than some of the 800 page books i have read in the past year. Also King never stops writing and has let us know that so may times. The machine isnt slowing down at all

It’s a very short book. I would switch and read Elevation before your book is due back. Then go back to the other book.





Hi, Gerwin. Nice to get your input. I agree to the extent that the plot about the (view spoiler)


I think I'm with you, Gerwin. It's a nice, quiet little story but it lacked the punch of his better short stories/novellas because of (view spoiler) . I'm glad I read it and I think it had some really good potential, but I don't think it'll become one of my favorite King works.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...



I wasn't expecting this and it was super weird, solely for the fact that I was expecting some gore (haven't read much King in a while). But I liked it overall. It was very feel good, and I think I needed that right about now. It wasn't very deep and there was a little of his sociopolitical opinions coming through (which I don't mind, because he didn't offend me at all). Overall, I liked it. Can't tell if I should go ahead and complete and rate it on my profile or if I want to wait to see if anyone has some insightful perspectives to offer up here.

I agree with you. I honestly just took the whole thing as a little bit of Castle Rock world-building, especially with the show just now coming out. This is my first King book explicitly in Castle Rock.


I read your review and liked it. Interesting thoughts you share. I can't wait to read it myself and see what I think.
I am trying to finish off the new John Grisham book "The Reckoning" and then I will start it.

I read your review and liked it. Interesting thoughts you share. I can't wait to read it myself and see what I think.
I am trying to finish off the new John Grisham book "The Reckoning" ..."
Thanks Scott. I'was reading Elevation and The Dark Tower 7 at the same time. There's a contrast. But I also agree with those who can read this as just a "feel good" piece.

I hadn't thought about the connection to the show. That helps a bit, because I could see this kind of thing happening in one of the Castle Rocks out there, for sure.

I have completed my read of Stephen King's "Elevation" and my review is located at the following link:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I have completed my read of Stephen King's "Elevation" and my review is located at the following link:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show..."
Nice review Scott. We pretty much agree. I especially like your take on King's successful efforts to deal with prejudice in a positive way. The reference to Karl from UP was pretty great too.


Amen.

The other parts of the book, I see it differently than the other comments I have read.
I think people are focused on the town and Scott and assuming the whole town is anti-lesbian. I saw it as Deirdre being the closed minded one and came to Castle Rock with preconceived notions about a small town. She automatically assumed everyone would be against them. Missy even said Deirdre was angry with everyone.
I don’t think the entire town changed their position after seeing the picture from the newspaper. I think it was Deirdre. Who wants to go to a restaurant when the hostess/co-owner has a permanent scowl on her face and that fake angry smile she gives? Word gets around when you have bad service no matter Hood the food is. I don’t think it was just Scott she treated that way.
I think the photo changed something in Deirdre. The newspaper called her a local as well. I am not sure in real life if someone with the chip on their shoulder like she did would change so quickly. But Missy did say she knew Deirdre had issues and I think Missy had been dealing with them and trying to get her to change her attitude. Just like she tried to tell Deirdre that they could continue jogging down their street and carry pooper scoopers and clean up after the dogs. She said Deirdre almost took her head off with the suggestion.
Yes, there were people in Castle Rock that were anti-lesbian couple but not the entire town. King showed examples of both. Some, like the doctors wife, did change and become accepting but she also met them. If Deirdre still had the same attitude, then the doctors wife and her would never have gotten along and the doctors wife would still have not been accepting even though she and Missy has mushroom love in common.
Forgetting about the message of tolerance, the story was still just ok. I don’t like books that are preaching to me but it was the ending is what puts me off. I don’t get what it was about.


I think you hit a very important point about Deirdre being so closed minded. I really think that King intended to represent that there are extreme people on both sides of the argument that are close-minded and refuse to listen. I intended to mention that in my review and somehow left it out.
There were people in the town that refused to listen and give the couple a chance in the very same way that Deirdre refused to listen to Scott. People who are set in their bias and bigoted ways, feeling they won’t be heard, keep reconciliation and growth from happening. And this is only my opinion, but I fully feel (just like you so eloquently described} that King purposely wanted to demonstrate that these close-minded people exist on both sides of the proverbial aisle. Deirdre on one side, and the angry construction worker who verbally attacked Scott on the other side.
Your point is an important theme that I think King was fully intending and hoping we, as his constant readers, would catch and understand.
Thank you for sharing.

Nice job!



I agree with you both, yeah. I am a part of the LGBT community and we are flawed just like everyone else. I understood Deidre's character more, perhaps, than most readers because I have felt similar things when I have become downtrodden about discrimination my friends and I have faced. So I get why she became that way. I just hated that she was so suspicious of Scott because he was a genuinely good guy and character. I was really glad that she came around towards the end and opened up again.

And let's not forget that she was effectively shunned by the whole town when they refused to put up the Turkey Trot posters with her picture on that. I'd definitely feel unsafe if that happened and I probably wouldn't be the nicest Nancy on the block.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Shadow of the Wind (other topics)The Shadow of the Wind (other topics)
Elevation (other topics)
Synopsis:
The latest from legendary master storyteller Stephen King, a riveting, extraordinarily eerie, and moving story about a man whose mysterious affliction brings a small town together—a timely, upbeat tale about finding common ground despite deep-rooted differences.
Although Scott Carey doesn’t look any different, he’s been steadily losing weight. There are a couple of other odd things, too. He weighs the same in his clothes and out of them, no matter how heavy they are. Scott doesn’t want to be poked and prodded. He mostly just wants someone else to know, and he trusts Doctor Bob Ellis.
In the small town of Castle Rock, the setting of many of King’s most iconic stories, Scott is engaged in a low grade—but escalating—battle with the lesbians next door whose dog regularly drops his business on Scott’s lawn. One of the women is friendly; the other, cold as ice. Both are trying to launch a new restaurant, but the people of Castle Rock want no part of a gay married couple, and the place is in trouble. When Scott finally understands the prejudices they face – including his own -- he tries to help. Unlikely alliances, the annual foot race, and the mystery of Scott’s affliction bring out the best in people who have indulged the worst in themselves and others.
From Stephen King, our “most precious renewable resource, like Shakespeare in the malleability of his work” (The Guardian), Elevation is an antidote to our divisive culture, as gloriously joyful (with a twinge of deep sadness) as “It’s a Wonderful Life.”