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11.22.63 Kindle Edition
King's highly acclaimed novel, now with a stunning new cover look.
WHAT IF you could go back in time and change the course of history? WHAT IF the watershed moment you could change was the JFK assassination? 11.22.63, the date that Kennedy was shot - unless . . .
King takes his protagonist Jake Epping, a high school English teacher from Lisbon Falls, Maine, 2011, on a fascinating journey back to 1958 - from a world of mobile phones and iPods to a new world of Elvis and JFK, of Plymouth Fury cars and Lindy Hopping, of a troubled loner named Lee Harvey Oswald and a beautiful high school librarian named Sadie Dunhill, who becomes the love of Jake's life - a life that transgresses all the normal rules of time.
With extraordinary imaginative power, King weaves the social, political and popular culture of his baby-boom American generation into a devastating exercise in escalating suspense.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHodder & Stoughton
- Publication date5 July 2012
- File size3.0 MB
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Review
King weaves the social, political and popular culture of his baby-boom American generation into a devastating exercise in escalating suspense. Daily Liberal
A fascinating journey. Armidale Express Extra
America's greatest living novelist. Lee Child
Mammoth but entertaining, this is part sci-fi, part suspense and part travelogue of a long-ago America. Who Weekly
'King's most purely entertaining novel in years . . . utterly compelling.' John Connolly on UNDER THE DOME
...This is the American of Stephen King's childhood and it's one that he re-creates in vivid and loving detail... This is a truly compulsive, addictive novel not just about time-travel or the Kennedy assassination but about recent American history and its might-have-beens, about love, and about how life 'turns on a dime'. It's a thunking 700-pager which left me only wanting more. The master storyteller in truly masterful form. Daily Mail
Fine stories to take with us into the night. -- Neil Gaiman on FULL DARK, NO STARS in the Guardian
King swiftly moves beyond vintage Americana to unfold a stunningly panoramic portrait of the era. His [King's] fascination with evil...arranges characters among clear mortal frontiers that fell meaningful rather than simplistic. King commands an inordinately fat space on the bookshelf with 11.22.63 but it's hard to begrudge when his vast imagination is working across such an epic canvas. Seven, The Sunday Telegraph
Stephen King is a remarkable and wonderful storyteller who never loosens his grip on the reader throughout the 750-page book. Woman's Day
Delivers a lot of praise and enjoy. The story comes off the blocks with almost alarming speed ... he tells a story like a pro .... 11.22.63 kept me up all night.' Daily Telegraph
Stephen King's new novel, 11.22.63, combines a variety of genres, being a JFK assassination, a story of time travel, a variation on the grail quest, a novel of voyeurism, a love story, a historical novel, a counter-factual historical novel and the chilling tale of a sinister animate universe, a form which can be traced back to the ghost stories of MR James. London Review of Books
One of the strengths of the book is King's at once nostalgic and honest view of the end of the Eisenhower era. King manages to avoid both sentimentalizing the past and treating it with massive condescension; his role as the poet of American brand-names serves him well here. Independent
King's gift of storytelling is unrivalled. His ferocious imagination is unlimited. George Pelecanos
'The pedal is indeed to the metal.' Guardian on UNDER THE DOME
The details of Fifties America, the cars, the clothes, the food, the televisions with wonky horizontal hold, are so vivid that you begin to wonder whether the author himself hasn't had access to a time machine.
...But as you worry at the paradoxes and the brilliantly explained pseudo science there is no denying that this monster yearn is blindingly impressive. Manly writers run out of steam as they get older. King, though, writes books that are ever longer and more demanding. I can't wait to see what he will tackle next. Daily Express
'Tight and energetic from start to finish.' New York Times on UNDER THE DOME
People often complain there are no writers of the stature of Dickens anymore. I think that for pure energy and invention missed with compassion, King stands in that writer's direct line. Dickens' heir is alive and well and living in Maine. Eureka Street
Not just an accomplished time-travel yarn but an action-heavy meditation on chance, choice and fate. Independent Books of the Year
Perhaps only seasoned storyteller Stephen King could accomplish changing the course of history in his vast time-travelling masterpiece whilst effortlessly weaving political and social details with abundant humour. King's intriguing new story structure will surely catapult the author to another best-seller. The Australian Women's Weekly
The most remarkable story-teller in modern American literature. Guardian, Mark Lawson
Stephen King at his epic, pedal-to-metal best. Sunday Times, Culture, Alison Flood
The novel is big, ambitious and haunting. King has probably absorbed the social, political, and popular culture of his baby-boom American generation as thoroughly and imaginatively as any other writer. Mildura Midweek
The master of the pen has written yet another extraordinary novel. Independent
A delightful blend of history and fantasy by a man who has always had a soft spot for an America where men wore fedoras, drove big Fords and could do the foxtrot. A thriller by a genius writer. The Courier Mail
You have to take a leap of faith with time-travel novels, but if there's one writer who can pull it off, it's Stephen King. ... Captivating, surprisingly pacy and free from sci-fi cliché, it's no wonder the film version is already being planned. Shortlist
11.22.63 marks a definite maturing of literary command and ambition. The key to any novel set in an alternate reality is credible world building, the steady accumulation of detail - preferably lightly distributed - that brings the story alive. King succeeds in this, partly drawing from his own memories. Adam LeBor, FT Weekend
This is Stephen King in top and chilling form. Take Five
A powerful love story. Mirror
'Staggeringly addictive.' USA Today
These early sections of the novel are almost irresistible entertaining, enlivened not just by King's supreme control of the form but by his sardonic wit and usual generosity of spirit and expansiveness. Yet as Jack/George moves closer to his goal, other, darker notes intrude, as time itself begins to resist his attempts to change its course, and as he begins to identify with his quarry.... Beneath the reassuring glow of King's portrait of an earlier, simpler time moves a darker and less comfortable vision, a glimpse of the terrifying machinery that moves below the surface of human history, and which stands as a stark, chilling rejoinder to the fantasies of escape embodied in so many time travel stories. The Weekend Australia
From the Inside Flap
King takes his protagonist Jake Epping, a high school English teacher from Lisbon Falls, Maine, 2011, on a fascinating journey back to 1958 - from a world of mobile phones and iPods to a new world of Elvis and JFK, of Plymouth Fury cars and Lindy Hopping, of a troubled loner named Lee Harvey Oswald and a beautiful high school librarian named Sadie Dunhill, who becomes the love of Jake's life - a life that transgresses all the normal rules of time.
With extraordinary imaginative power, King weaves the social, political and popular culture of his baby-boom American generation into a devastating exercise in escalating suspense.
From the Back Cover
King takes his protagonist Jake Epping, a high school English teacher from Lisbon Falls, Maine, 2011, on a fascinating journey back to 1958 - from a world of mobile phones and iPods to a new world of Elvis and JFK, of Plymouth Fury cars and Lindy Hopping, of a troubled loner named Lee Harvey Oswald and a beautiful high school librarian named Sadie Dunhill, who becomes the love of Jake's life - a life that transgresses all the normal rules of time.
With extraordinary imaginative power, King weaves the social, political and popular culture of his baby-boom American generation into a devastating exercise in escalating suspense.
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
On Monday, March 25, Lee came walking up Neely Street carrying a long package wrapped in brown paper. Peering through a tiny crack in the curtains, I could see the words REGISTERED and INSURED stamped on it in big red letters. For the first time I thought he seemed furtive and nervous, actually looking around at his exterior surroundings instead of at the spooky furniture deep in his head. I knew what was in the package: a 6.5mm Carcano rifle'also known as a Mannlicher-Carcano'complete with scope, purchased from Klein's Sporting Goods in Chicago. Five minutes after he climbed the outside stairs to the second floor, the gun Lee would use to change history was in a closet above my head. Marina took the famous pictures of him holding it just outside my living room window six days later, but I didn't see it. That was a Sunday, and I was in Jodie. As the tenth grew closer, those weekends with Sadie had become the most important, the dearest, things in my life.
9
I came awake with a jerk, hearing someone mutter 'still not too late' under his breath. I realized it was me and shut up.
Sadie murmured some thick protest and turned over in bed. The familiar squeak of the springs locked me in place and time: the Candlewood Bungalows, April 5, 1963. I fumbled my watch from the nightstand and peered at the luminous numbers. It was quarter past two in the morning, which meant it was actually the sixth of April.
Still not too late.
Not too late for what? To back off, to let well enough alone? Or bad enough, come to that? The idea of backing off was attractive, God knew. If I went ahead and things went wrong, this could be my last night with Sadie. Ever.
Even if you do have to kill him, you don't have to do it right away.
True enough. Oswald was going to relocate to New Orleans for awhile after the attempt on the general's life'another shitty apartment, one I'd already visited'but not for two weeks. That would give me plenty of time to stop his clock. But I sensed it would be a mistake to wait very long. I might find reasons to keep on waiting. The best one was beside me in this bed: long, lovely, and smoothly naked. Maybe she was just another trap laid by the obdurate past, but that didn't matter, because I loved her. And I could envision a scenario'all too clearly'where I'd have to run after killing Oswald. Run where? Back to Maine, of course. Hoping I could stay ahead of the cops just long enough to get to the rabbit-hole and escape into a future where Sadie Dunhill would be . . . well . . . about eighty years old. If she were alive at all. Given her cigarette habit, that would be like rolling six the hard way.
I got up and went to the window. Only a few of the bungalows were occupied on this early-spring weekend. There was a mud- or manure-splattered pickup truck with a trailer full of what looked like farm implements behind it. An Indian motorcycle with a sidecar. A couple of station wagons. And a two-tone Plymouth Fury. The moon was sliding in and out of thin clouds and it wasn't possible to make out the color of the car's lower half by that stuttery light, but I was pretty sure I knew what it was, anyway.
I pulled on my pants, undershirt, and shoes. Then I slipped out of the cabin and walked across the courtyard. The chilly air bit at my bed-warm skin, but I barely felt it. Yes, the car was a Fury, and yes, it was white over red, but this one wasn't from Maine or Arkansas; the plate was Oklahoma, and the decal in the rear window read GO, SOONERS. I peeked in and saw a scatter of textbooks. Some student, maybe headed south to visit his folks on spring break. Or a couple of horny teachers taking advantage of the Candlewood's liberal guest policy.
Just another not-quite-on-key chime as the past harmonized with itself. I touched the trunk, as I had back in Lisbon Falls, then returned to the bungalow. Sadie had pushed the sheet down to her waist, and when I came in, the draft of cool air woke her up. She sat, holding the sheet over her breasts, then let it drop when she saw it was me.
"Can't sleep, honey?'
"I had a bad dream and went out for some air.'
"What was it?'
I unbuttoned my jeans, kicked off my loafers. "Can't remember.'
'try. My mother always used to say if you tell your dreams, they won't come true.'
I got into bed with her wearing nothing but my undershirt. "My mother used to say if you kiss your honey, they won't come true.'
"Did she actually say that?'
"No.'
"Well," she said thoughtfully, 'it sounds possible. Let's try it.'
We tried it.
One thing led to another.
10
Afterward, she lit a cigarette. I lay watching the smoke drift up and turn blue in the occasional moonlight coming through the half-drawn curtains. I'd never leave the curtains that way at Neely Street, I thought. At Neely Street, in my other life, I'm always alone but still careful to close them all the way. Except when I'm peeking, that is. Lurking.
Just then I didn't like myself very much.
"George?'
I sighed. 'that's not my name.'
"I know.'
I looked at her. She inhaled deeply, enjoying her cigarette guiltlessly, as people do in the Land of Ago. "I don't have any inside information, if that's what you're thinking. But it stands to reason. The rest of your past is made up, after all. And I'm glad. I don't like George all that much. It's kind of . . . what's that word you use sometimes? . . . kind of dorky.'
"How does Jake suit you?'
"As in Jacob?'
"Yes.'
"I like it.' She turned to me. "In the Bible, Jacob wrestled an angel. And you're wrestling, too. Aren't you?'
"I suppose I am, but not with an angel.' Although Lee Oswald didn't make much of a devil, either. I liked George de Mohren--schildt better for the devil role. In the Bible, Satan's a tempter who makes the offer and then stands aside. I hoped de Mohrenschildt was like that.
Sadie snubbed her cigarette. Her voice was calm, but her eyes were dark. "Are you going to be hurt?'
"I don't know.'
"Are you going away? Because if you have to go away, I'm not sure I can stand it. I would have died before I said it when I was there, but Reno was a nightmare. Losing you for good . . .' She shook her head slowly. "No, I'm not sure I could stand that.'
"I want to marry you," I said.
'my God," she said softly. "Just when I'm ready to say it'll never happen, Jake-alias-George says right now.'
"Not right now, but if the next week goes the way I hope it does . . . will you?'
"Of course. But I do have to ask one teensy question.'
"Am I single? Legally single? Is that what you want to know?'
She nodded.
"I am," I said.
She let out a comic sigh and grinned like a kid. Then she sobered. "Can I help you? Let me help you.'
The thought turned me cold, and she must have seen it. Her lower lip crept into her mouth. She bit down on it with her teeth. 'that bad, then," she said musingly.
"Let's put it this way: I'm currently close to a big machine full of sharp teeth, and it's running full speed. I won't allow you next to me while I'm monkeying with it.'
"When is it?' she asked. "Your . . . I don't know . . . your date with destiny?'
'still to be determined.' I had a feeling that I'd said too much already, but since I'd come this far, I decided to go a little farther. 'something's going to happen this Wednesday night. Something I have to witness. Then I'll decide.'
"Is there no way I can help you?'
"I don't think so, honey.'
"If it turns out I can''
'thanks," I said. "I appreciate that. And you really will marry me?'
"Now that I know your name is Jake? Of course.'
Product details
- ASIN : B005LCYR7Y
- Publisher : Hodder & Stoughton
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : 5 July 2012
- Edition : 1st
- Language : English
- File size : 3.0 MB
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 752 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-1444727326
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: 3,147 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- Customer reviews:
About the author

Stephen King is the author of more than sixty books, all of them worldwide bestsellers. His recent work includes NEVER FLINCH, YOU LIKE IT DARKER (a New York Times Book Review top ten horror book of 2024), HOLLY (a New York Times Notable Book of 2023), FAIRY TALE, BILLY SUMMERS, IF IT BLEEDS, THE INSTITUTE, ELEVATION, THE OUTSIDER, SLEEPING BEAUTIES (cowritten with his son Owen King), and the Bill Hodges trilogy: END OF WATCH, FINDERS KEEPERS, and MR. MERCEDES (an Edgar Award winner for Best Novel). His novel 11/22/63 was named a top ten book of 2011 by the New York Times Book Review and won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Mystery/Thriller. His epic works THE DARK TOWER, IT, PET SEMATARY, DOCTOR SLEEP, and FIRESTARTER are the basis for major motion pictures, with IT now the highest-grossing horror film of all time. He is the recipient of the 2018 PEN America Literary Service Award, the 2014 National Medal of Arts, and the 2003 National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters. He lives in Bangor, Maine, with his wife, novelist Tabitha King.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this book to be one of Stephen King's best novels, praising its gripping plot with good twists and turns, and how it's written with a light touch that makes it believable. Moreover, they appreciate the historical backdrop that keeps readers engaged, the well-developed characters, and the thought-provoking concept. However, the pacing receives mixed reviews - while some say it moves at a fair pace, others find it slows down to a stodgy plod. Additionally, several customers note that the book is far too long.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as brilliant and an engrossing read, with one customer noting it's among the best recent Stephen King novels.
"This is a great science fiction novel from Kingthe best of his books I have read to date...." Read more
"Long, absorbing and ultimately satisfying riff on the difficulties inherent in altering the “obdurate” past...." Read more
"...(King's evocation of America in the late 50s and early 60s is extremely skillful and one of the book's biggest pleasures)..." Read more
"...I am pleased to say that his latest offering is a good one...." Read more
Customers find the book's story compelling with good twists and turns, and one customer describes it as a suspenseful tale of time travel.
"...on the Kennedy assassination and provides a very plausible and detailed back story of Lee Harvey Oswald and family seen through the eyes of our..." Read more
"...Jake falls in love with a local substitute teacher. Their relationship is explored gently. The courting is in keeping of the era it takes place...." Read more
"...The tension rises in this book all the time, surprises are well preserved and twists are served at just the right time...." Read more
"...he is just that , but King’s 11.22.63 is first and foremost an amazing love story, set within a time travelling epic spanning the late 50s and early..." Read more
Customers praise the writing style of the book, describing it as brilliantly told and American writing at its very best, with a light touch that makes it believable.
"...Despite the splitting into parts I found the book easy to read from begining to end...." Read more
"...His depiction of Jake integrating himself into society is believable and engaging. Jake himself is an excellent character...." Read more
"...its page count it was a dream to read and you can roll through chapter after chapter with ease .I probably can’t convince you enough in a short..." Read more
"...The attention to detail - the amplified taste of additive-free food, the constant odour of oil refinery's polluting Texan air, the convoluted..." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking, appreciating its concept and amazing premise, with one customer noting its clever descriptions that hold readers' attention.
"...extensive bibliography on the Kennedy assassination and provides a very plausible and detailed back story of Lee Harvey Oswald and family seen..." Read more
"...short and snappy, then, this might not be for you, but it is a deeply immersive and impeccably-researched novel, with well-drawn characters..." Read more
"...With this book King is extremely clever. He has built into the story a failsafe switch that resets any history that Jake may alter...." Read more
"...excellent read but also one of the best, most powerful and most profoundly wise books by this very talented author, who with this novel just reached..." Read more
Customers enjoy the time travel elements in the book, appreciating its historical backdrop and wonderful journey back to the sixties.
"...Nostalgia and vintage Americana are a huge part of this novel, and King also continues to be fascinated with the particular character of places and..." Read more
"...There's twists and turns, time travel conundrums, wonderful character portrayals, amazing descriptions of the US in 1958-1963 with fashions and..." Read more
"...It reads as a perfectly paced thriller with that extra whiff of time travel mystery. 1950's small town America is beautifully evoked...." Read more
"...However, whereas the story is about time travel and whether changing one focal point in history would make the future world a better place,..." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, noting that the characters are nicely developed and beautifully portrayed, with one customer highlighting how the little side stories add depth to them.
"...I found myself feeling for the our hero. He is a very likeable character. The book is longer than I anticipated as it is..." Read more
"...it is a deeply immersive and impeccably-researched novel, with well-drawn characters..." Read more
"...Lee Harvey Oswald is well portrayed. I have no idea what the man was like in reality, but King portrays him in an effective way...." Read more
"...Sure, he writes great, believable characters, but I've not personally felt that the relationship between any come off so well - and be so moving -..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some finding it moves along at a fair pace and keeps the pages moving, while others note that it slows down to a stodgy plod and feels rushed.
"...automobiles, attitudes to race, sex and religion - all transport the reader as seamlessly as this story's fissure in time as Jake lives his life in..." Read more
"...The central character is like an automaton or robot devoid of any humanity or realistic emotion. We keep getting told he doesn’t cry (so what?),..." Read more
"...from end to end, gripping, emotionally intelligent and at times moving." Read more
"The book itself is pacey and interesting, certainly at the start...." Read more
Customers find the book's length excessive, describing it as long-winded in the early stages, with one customer noting it consists of 500 pages of rambling irreverence.
"...enjoyed the book from the start; on the contrary I found it infuriating from the start and it went downhill from there...." Read more
"...Then - it becomes very tiring. There are approximately 300 pages of absolute drivel. There is no story...." Read more
"Long, absorbing and ultimately satisfying riff on the difficulties inherent in altering the “obdurate” past...." Read more
"...Unfortunately it is rather over-long and definitely flags in places...." Read more
Reviews with images

Unfortunately the quality of the book not good but hoping the content will make up for it.
Top reviews from United Kingdom
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- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 3 February 2025This is a great science fiction novel from Kingthe best of his books I have read to date.
It didn't start outquite how I expected it would as it starts with the description of an essay assignment . I was confused as to weather this was a prologue from King at first as the story is told in the first person .
There is no time machine in this book, that's what I was expecting but there is your usual hero (Jake), villans a many even a love interest.
There is more to this book than just a man trying to change history. The story is well thought out, not just jumping straight into 63. King has carefully crafted one man's story of what is right and wrong when history is in your hands with a tale of friendship, heartache and love. The twists and turns of the story will keep you on the edge of your seat, I was. I found myself feeling for the our hero. He is a very likeable character.
The book is longer than I anticipated as it is
divided into six parts with individual chapters in each . Despite the splitting into parts I found the book easy to read from begining to end.
I have read only a small number of King books and this is looking like being the best.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 February 2025Long, absorbing and ultimately satisfying riff on the difficulties inherent in altering the “obdurate” past.
The author has exhaustively researched the very extensive bibliography on the Kennedy assassination and provides a very plausible and detailed back story of Lee Harvey Oswald and family seen through the eyes of our narrator.
The recurrent themes of the manner in which seemingly disparate events “harmonise” speaks to the mildly supernatural forces at work here, familiar from many other Stephen King novels.
There’s a great semi-tragic love affair in there too, whose denouement had me weeping.
A wonderful read.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 15 November 201611.22.63 is a novel about a man going back in time to try to prevent the assassination of a president, in the hope that it will alter the future of America (and the world) for the better. I finished reading it the day Donald Trump was elected, which put a rather different slant on the whole thing. I can't help wondering if in 50 years' time someone will be writing a similar book in which the protagonist tries to cause, rather than prevent, a president's murder.
Anyway. 11.22.63 is Stephen King's story of Jake Epping, who is shown a portal from the present day into 1958 by Al, the owner of his local diner. Al has discovered that he can stay in the past for as long as he likes, but that only two minutes will have passed in the present when returns - and that each he does return, the past 'resets' itself and his previous actions are undone. Al, now terminally ill with lung cancer, has devoted years of his life to studying the assassination of John F Kennedy and the life of Lee Harvey Oswald, in the desperate hope that he might be able to prevent it. When he realises he's close to death, he passes his secret to Jake and asks him to make one last attempt to keep JFK alive.
11.22.63 has a lot of features you might recognise from Stephen King's other work. The narrator, Jake Epping, is technically a schoolteacher but like many of King's characters is also a writer. Nostalgia and vintage Americana are a huge part of this novel, and King also continues to be fascinated with the particular character of places and their influence on their inhabitants. Derry, the former industrial town stalked by Pennywise the Clown in It, makes an appearance, along with a few of the characters from that novel, and Jodie, Texas, where Jake makes his home for part of his stay in the past, is the sort of perfect, archetypal American small town that no longer exists (Bill Bryson, in his book The Lost Continent, talks of his search for such a town, which he christens Amalgam, on his travels through the US). However, because the novel's plot requires Epping to prevent Kennedy's assassination, the real-life towns of Dallas and Fort Worth also make an appearance, neither of which, it has to be said, come out of the story particularly well. Dallas, King feels, is subject to the same dark undercurrent of evil as the fictional Derry, inhabited by inexplicably suspicious, unfriendly people and plagued by violent crime.
While 11.22.63 is a long way from being a horror novel, it is often dark, and there is an odd sense of menace that hangs over things, even when Jake is living in his beloved Jodie and has fallen in love with high school librarian Sadie Dunhill. When Jake meets the mysterious 'yellow card man', a vagrant who accosts him on each of his visits to the past, it's clear that there is some supernatural significance to his presence.
However, I think it's this element of the book that's the least successful. The mystery of the 'yellow card man' and the 'harmonising' of the past, which means Jake frequently experiences mirroring or coincidences throughout his time there, feels like an afterthought. I don't think it's necessary, and although it lends a sinister edge at times, it's resolved fairly hastily and anticlimactically towards the end of the book. The last few chapters of the book are quite predictable - at least, they are if you've read fair few time-travel stories before.
There's no denying that this is a very long novel at close to 750 pages. Does it really need to be that long? Probably not: I personally really enjoyed the lengthy digressions, the numerous subplots and the seemingly endless detail, as for me they made the setting and the era feel so real (King's evocation of America in the late 50s and early 60s is extremely skillful and one of the book's biggest pleasures) but I do think King could have told this story in a novel two-thirds this size. Bear in mind that when Jake enters the past, it's always in 1958. At this point Lee Harvey Oswald wasn't even living in the US, let alone Texas, so there's a whole lot of other material to get through before the actual assassination storyline really kicks in - most of the book, in fact, is not really about the Kennedy assassination at all. Even when Oswald does return from his sojourn in Russia Jake has to spend many months effectively stalking him to establish that the conspiracy theories aren't true and that Oswald really was/will be the one to shoot Kennedy on the fateful day. Again, I had no problem with any of this and enjoyed every page - but I know some people will, and not unreasonably.
If you like your thrillers short and snappy, then, this might not be for you, but it is a deeply immersive and impeccably-researched novel, with well-drawn characters (Oswald and his wife Marina, in fact, are among the most vividly portrayed).
Top reviews from other countries
- Amy GReviewed in the United States on 15 January 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Used book with no binding creases
The "used" book showed up and was in perfect condition, as if it had never been opened. The novel itself is different from what one would assume when reading Stephen King and it is fabulous. Not a scary/horror book.
- TaniaReviewed in the United States on 27 August 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Time travel and focusing on the past being obdurate......LOVED IT.
I loved this book. I couldn't put it down (even though I had to, lol). This is a different take on time travel, I won't go into detail so I don't spoil it for other readers. It's suspenseful with a few twists but at the same time you can see a few things coming. Going back in time, Stephen King does such a wonderful job of describing the environment, the prices of the products back in the land of ago, the music en fin, you actually feel like you are being transported to that place in time. It's not without it's crime, but the focus is not on that as much as on the steps the character has to take to get to stop something. The past is obdurate is a sentence used throughout the book, which means you cannot change things without some kind of invisible force trying to stop you. Very well-written, with a nice touch of romance and also nostalgic. Ironically / interestingly the 'future' in this book had Mrs. Clinton as president.....that's all I will say without spoiling it too much for others. If you love the mix of facts with fiction - you will love this book as it uses historical information intertwined with the fiction of this book. It makes you indeed wonder what would've happened if president Kennedy hadn't been assassinated. Highly recommended.
-
NiccolòReviewed in Italy on 15 September 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastico, difficile staccarsi una volta iniziata la lettura!
Uno dei libri più avvincenti mai letti. Consiglio la versione in inglese. Davvero difficile "metterlo giù" una volta iniziato, l'ho poi consigliato a mia moglie ed ha avuto lo stesso effetto. Ci si sente davvero "dentro la storia" nel senso più vero del termine trattando il libro di avvenimenti storici che hanno cambiato il futuro del mondo.
- Cliente AmazonReviewed in Brazil on 3 May 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars So much better than the TV series
What an amazing story! The main character falls in love with the 50s and it’s so nice to read about this, which I don’t think it was quite portrayed in the TV series.
- Nan W.Reviewed in the United States on 11 July 2012
5.0 out of 5 stars As If I Was There
I was a senior in high school when JFK was assassinated so the event is very clearly etched in my brain. I was looking so forward to this book by Steven King and can say without a doubt that I have not been disappointed. It is an excellent story, so many of the details I can remember from growing up. The description of the late 1950's and into the '60's are so clear.
I don't like reviews that tell the story, and I won't be doing that here. What I will say is that the characters are written with such clarity it is as if I got to know them personally. The details and the events are scripted to perfection. The story flowed and never did I lose interest or feel that I wanted to skip ahead.
I listened to this on CD, and my friend, who read the book, thought I might lose some of the story by listening to it; however, I didn't, if anything I think it made the story even more interesting.
Would I recommend this book...in capital letters YES!