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Cell by Stephen King
Cell by Stephen King









" Campbell Scott does such an amazing job narrating this book.

Cell by Stephen King

Overall Performance: Narration Rating: Story Rating:.It feels like it doesn't need to as well seeing as it's from the perspective of what would be likely you or I in this situation.

Cell by Stephen King

It's mostly a book about exploring these characters and the uncertainty that pervades their situation of which King doesn't offer an explanation for at the end. The protagonist, Clay, is trying to find his family and a ragtag bunch of people fall in and out of his life as he makes his journey of which some are lucky and some aren't. It's got a good idea behind it (mobiles fuzzing up the brain and turning you into a zombie) and also concerns itself with telepathic ideas. "Not as gory as I anticipated but a great read nonetheless. Who doesn't have one? Stephen King's utterly gripping, gory, and fascinating novel doesn't just ask the question "Can you hear me now?" It answers it with a vengeance. There are one hundred and ninety-three million cell phones in the United States alone. Clay and the few desperate survivors who join him suddenly find themselves in the pitch-black night of civilization's darkest age, surrounded by chaos, carnage, and a human horde that has been reduced to its basest nature.and then begins to evolve. The cause of the devastation is a phenomenon that will come to be known as The Pulse, and the delivery method is a cell phone. Why not a little treat for himself? Clay's feeling good about the future. He's already picked up a gift for his long-suffering wife, and he knows just what he'll get for his boy Johnny.

Cell by Stephen King Cell by Stephen King

He's just landed a comic book deal that might finally enable him to support his family by making art instead of teaching it. On October 1st, God is in His heaven, the stock market stands at 10,140, most of the planes are on time, and Clayton Riddell, an artist from Maine, is almost bouncing up Boylston Street in Boston.











Cell by Stephen King