Book 5 (of 52) – 11/22/63

Stephen King - 11/22/63

Imagine stumbling across a wormhole which allowed you to travel back in time, to September 1958.  Anything you did in the past affected the future, until you traveled back in time again and reset everything.  Could you invest the five years necessary to save President Kennedy from an assassin’s bullet?  Even if it meant giving up everything, and everyone, you’ve ever loved?  School teacher Jake Epping finds out in Stephen King’s gripping tale of time travel, patriotism, and the unintended effects of mucking with the past.

I first read King’s work during my freshman year of high school.  In fact, I remember reading Pet Sematary after finishing my Biology final, waiting for the class to be dismissed.  11/22/63 marks my 10th King work, but the first since 1993.  It is a great story about two men on a mission, one a man out of time, the other a man out of place.  Their lives will intersect on the fateful November morning, unless the past is able to defend itself against an interloper and the interloper doesn’t become too complacent in the new life he has made for himself in 1960s small-town Texas.  The only reason it took me so long to get through it is the 842 page count.  If this is indicative of King’s more recent output, then perhaps I won’t wait another 19 years before reading him again.

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