Books : The Regulators

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Author name: Richard Bachman

 : The Regulators
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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN num: 9780451191014
ISBN number: 0451191013
Label: Signet
Manufacturer: Signet
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 512
Printing Date: September 01, 1997
Publishing house: Signet
Release Date: April 02, 2002
Sale Popularity Level: 61974
Studio: Signet




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Editor's Notes and Comments:

Product Description:
There’s a place in Wentworth, Ohio, where summer is in full swing. It’s called Poplar Street. Up until now it’s been a nice place to live. The idling blue van around the corner is about to change all that. Let the battle against evil begin.

Amazon.com Review:
An evil creature called Tak uses the imagination of an autistic boy to shift a residential street in small-town Ohio into a world so bizarre and brutal that only a child could think it up. It's as two-dimensional and gaudy as a kid's comic book, but for this reviewer, The Regulators is a gripping adventure tale about what happens when a mind fixated on TV (especially old Westerns and a cartoon called MotoKops 2200) runs amok. As Michael Collins writes in Necrofile, '[Stephen] King offers his readers a glimpse of the true evil of popular culture ... which has no design or intent, only an empty need to sustain itself. King is, I think, about the canniest observer of what America is, and that he generally writes horror ought to give us pause from time to time.'



Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 3 out of 5 stars - An Enjoyable Thrill Ride - Nothing More
"The Regulators" is more of a carnival ride than a novel. Richard Bachman (King) has spilled a stream of consciousness story onto the pages and created something more akin to a summer blockbuster film. The premise is slightly silly and most of the characters lack depth, but the action has high energy leaving the reader breathless even if it offers nothing more than a thrill ride.

Bachman swiftly creates a stereotypical suburban neighborhood that is blown apart by television characters come to life from an autistic six year olds imagination gone horribly wrong. Tak, an evil spirit that inhabits the boy's mind, bends innocent imaginative fantasy into deadly mayhem and makes for an interesting protagonist that is never fully explored or explained. In fact character development of any kind would presumably only get in the way of the action, so Bachman relies on stock character cut-outs that we relate to through shared stereotypes (i.e. washed-up hippie, spoiled mother, ex jock...). However, the characters don't really matter much (except for Seth and Audrey) to enjoy the story and are only there to drive the plot, action and violence.

I must admit that for everything wrong with this book I breezed through it and enjoyed every minute (except for some of the passages that told a weak back-story and interrupted the action). "The Regulators" will not be remembered as anything special except that you will remember having a great time reading it.




Rated by buyers 3 out of 5 stars - Meh
I just reread this work, the strange companion novel to Stephen King's release "Desperation". Certainly not my favourite Stephen King/Bachman book, but not my least favourite, either.

In high school, we actually read a Stephen King novel in AP English class. My professor's theory is that in the future, King may be an actually famous author, not so much for his works per se, but for the introspection into late 20th-Century life that his characters offer. King's characters are real, normal, human people tossed into unimaginable situations by powers outside their will, and react to them in a typical, mortal way. Cabot (the teacher) maintained it was this fundamental humanity that would eventually lead to King's immortality as a writer: his glimpses into the banal of everyday life, punctuated with the insane.

"The Regulators" is no different in that sense; most of the main characters in this work are indistinguishable from people you could find in any city or town in the United States today, placed in a development beyond what any of us are capable of imagining. Personally, I found some of the side pieces; the scripts and such tossed in between chapters-- more distracting than enlightening, but other than that, the work is solid. My overall rating, in one word, is "meh."



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - Unique even for SK
I read this a few years back when I wasn't reading very often and this one was a pure joy as I recall. I know nothing about the sister novel or whatever, just that this one I found intriguing and entertaining and highly imaginative in the best sense of the word. It's one of King's very unsubtle novels as I remember, not quite as sledgehammer like as Cell but still...



Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - King Satirizes Himself through Bachman
I think this King satirizing his own writing style.

All of the things for which the haters criticize him are in this book: gore, ultra-violence, pop references, TV sensibility, shallow characterizations and literally 2D stage sets are here on display.

It's a blast watching King flatten and toy with his own style.

After reading The Regulators, the companion novel Desperation shows what King's full writing is capable of evoking. Together they create a wonderful juxtaposition of styles.

Reading The Regulators and Desperation back to back offers a commentary on two very different perspectives of horror story writing that is entertaining and illuminating.



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - Desperation Lite
The lesser evil twin of "Desperation," a novel I deeply enjoyed in spite of the bad rap it gets from other King fans. Since both novels are steeped in the same mythos, right down to the cast of heroes and villains, they're best enjoyed in close succession. "Desperation" should probably be read first; this novel, although compelling enough in its own right, depends heavily on its twin brother for the unsettling poignancy King's readers expect.

With that said..."Tak!"

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