The Dark Tower: The Wind Through The Keyhole

0
Your rating: None

The Dark Tower: The Wind Through The Keyhole

By Stephen King
ISBN: 9781444731705
Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton
Year: 2012
Language: English
MRP Price: INR 999.00
Our Price  : INR 830.00

Other Books from the author

  • Under The Dome
  • The Eyes Of The Dragon
  • IT
  • Cell
  • Everything's Eventual 1408
  • Nightmares & Dreamscapes
  • Misery
  • The Dark Half
  • Just After Sunset
  • Duma Key
  • The Green Mile: Part 2
  • The Green Mile: Part 6
  • Rose Madder
  • Danse Macabre
  • The Green Mile: Part 3
  • Different Seasons
  • Cujo
  • Insomnia
  • The Shawshank Redemption
  • The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon
  • From A Buick 8
  • The Green Mile: Part 4
  • Dolores Claiborne
  • The Dark Tower
  • The Green Mile: Part 5
  • The Green Mile: Part 1
  • Pet Sematary
  • Bag of Bones
  • Gerald's Game
  • The Tommyknockers
  • The Dark Half
  • The Stand
  • Pet Sematary
  • Different Seasons
  • Desperation
  • CELL
  • CARRIE
  • BAG OF BONES
  • The Talisman
Synopsis

For readers new to The Dark Tower, The Wind Through The Keyhole is a stand-alone novel, and a wonderful introduction to the series. It is a story within a story, which features both the younger and older gunslinger Roland on his quest to find the Dark Tower. Fans of the existing seven books in the series will also delight in discovering what happened to Roland and his ka tet between the time they leave the Emerald City and arrive at the outskirts of Calla Bryn Sturgis. This Russian Doll of a novel, a story within a story, within a story, visits Mid-World's last gunslinger, Roland Deschain, and his ka-tet as a ferocious storm halts their progress along the Path of the Beam. (The novel can be placed between Dark Tower IV and Dark Tower V.) Roland tells a tale from his early days as a gunslinger, in the guilt ridden year following his mother's death. Sent by his father to investigate evidence of a murderous shape shifter, a skin man, Roland takes charge of Bill Streeter, a brave but terrified boy who is the sole surviving witness to the beast's most recent slaughter. Roland, himself only a teenager, calms the boy by reciting a story from the Book of Eld that his mother used to read to him at bedtime, The Wind through the Keyhole. A person's never too old for stories, he says to Bill. Man and boy, girl and woman, we live for them. And stories like these, they live for us.

x