-
Under the Dome (Paperback)
Short Description for Under the DomeStephen King's most riveting novel since THE STAND, in which every chapter ends on a cliffhanger -- a Maine town and its inhabitants are isolated from the world by an invisible, impenetrable dome
Full description- Publisher: Hodder Paperback
- Published: 08 July 2010
- Format: Paperback 896 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Contemporary Fiction
- ISBN 13: 9780340992586 ISBN 10: 0340992581
- Sales rank: 1,663
Other books
Reviews for Under the Dome
-
Fantastic King!
This book was one of the few books that got me hinged on Stephen King.
I picked it up in the bookstore out of the acknowledgement of the fact that Stephen King's name seems to be all over the book shelf, and this one was the most recently finished.
When I started to read it, the reason was similar to the one out of which I picked it up in a bookstore, I just grabbed a book that was closest to me, and this book came handy.
However, when I started to read I could not remember anything at all, and only consciously learned that I was already halfway through when I had to stop and grasp out of fatigue and eyesore!
Anyway, I finished this book pretty fast, and the story, the building of characters, the suspense, the idea, everything was just there for you to admire and enjoy.
I relished the very moment when I was reading it! by Tan Jianunder review -
Great book
I loved this book from the very first page. It brought out all my emotions. A story of human behaviour with all its faults. There were a couple of areas where I felt why did this or that not happen. It did not detract from an unusual and interesting book. by Carol A Bennison
under review -
Top review
Excelent Read
This in my opinion takes Stephen King to a whole new level. Set in the recent past this book follows a town of people who are trapped under an invisible dome.
The way it has been written is a bit hard to grasp at first but makes the story more like an account of a real event made by Stephen King than a story.
Recomended read. by Paul Oakesunder review

share
tweet