Jedo wrote:I just finished the Gunslinger! Definitely an entertaining book, and it was enough to convince me to pick up The Drawing of The Three, which I just started. I don't know if I can commit to 7 books yet, but so far so good. Does the series really stay consistent the whole time, or does it lose steam somewhere along the way? 4500 pages is a lot...
And of course, nothing that remotely resembles spoilers!
I found it satisfying enough to re-read it.
You need to know this: King wrote the first four books, then there was a very long lapse before he picked up the series. So book 5 is a bit different in style, and in the last two books things get pretty complex. Nevertheless, the series holds together quite well, in spite of some unexpected storytelling techniques.
I don't feel that it loses steam at all, honestly. But you need to be prepared for a story that branches out quit a bit in the second section (books 5-7), but which comes together quite well at the end.
The Drawing of the Three really sets the tone for the next few books, though; it's quite surprising, in that it shows just how non-fantasy the series is (if you consider fantasy to be Lord of the Rings related, as most is).