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Het verloren Rijk (De Donkere Toren, #3) - Community Reviews back

by Hugo Kuipers, Hugo Timmerman, Ned Dameron, Stephen King
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Abandoned by Booklikes
Abandoned by Booklikes rated it 6 years ago
I have to say that it was great to re-read this and see the ka-tet all together again. I have issues with some of the upcoming books and heaven knows I will forever be irked by Song of Susannah and The Dark Tower as standalones. That said, this book helps set up the latter books as well as foreshado...
Reading is my ESCAPE from Reality!
Reading is my ESCAPE from Reality! rated it 8 years ago
I have to say that I'm so glad I'm reading this book now that they are all written. This book ended right in the middle of the action, and luckily I can move right on to Wizard & Glass (book 4). If I had to wait, I would be very annoyed with King. I loved this book. This is my favorite so far in...
Fangirl Moments and My Two Cents
Fangirl Moments and My Two Cents rated it 8 years ago
I'm in love with this story and these characters. It took me a moment with the first book, but I loved the second and this one. I'm on the edge wanting to know what's going to happen to them. With this author, you just never really know. The way they all come to together from different times and...
The English Student
The English Student rated it 10 years ago
The Waste Lands is the third in Stephen King's epic fantasy-western septet The Dark Tower, and it's always been my favourite. So it's interesting to see how it stands up to a re-read. It sees Roland Deschain, last of the gunslingers, and his new friends, drawn, for reasons best known to Sai King, ...
Cody's Bookshelf
Cody's Bookshelf rated it 10 years ago
It seems like every time I read this book, life gets in the way and I can't ever finish it as quickly as I'd like to. Seriously -- every time I make another trek to the Tower, I can almost count on life getting hectic while reading THE WASTE LANDS. I read THE GUNSLINGER in one day and THE DRAWING OF...
Read All The Things! Reviews
Read All The Things! Reviews rated it 10 years ago
The only coherent thought I had when I finished this novel was Um . . . wow.In this book, the gunslinger, Roland, “draws” two more members of the group who will help him reach the Dark Tower. One of them is an eleven-year-old named Jake, and the other is a dog-like creature called Oy. As the group f...
Seriously, Read a Book!
Seriously, Read a Book! rated it 11 years ago
I'm not usually one for "fantasy," though there have been a number exceptions. I like to know "the rules" of whatever world I'm in (I guess there's a bit of Annie Wilkes in me), and it can take me a while to "calibrate" appropriately. The characters aren't that far ahead of me in some ways. Even Rol...
Dantastic Book Reviews
Dantastic Book Reviews rated it 11 years ago
Notes from the 2014 re-read:I always forget about Roland having to deal with the time paradox he created. Roland and Jake both going bad because of it was really well done and pretty believable. Are the robots at the portal symbolic of the ultimately circular nature of Roland's quest? Did King know ...
Lornographic Material
Lornographic Material rated it 11 years ago
The third Dark Tower book is not only my favorite in the series, but it's one of my favorite books from King period. Out of his immense catalog, it ranges around number five or six out of his best for me. Unlike THE GUNSLINGER and THE DRAWING OF THE THREE, THE WASTE LANDS put me in Roland's world,...
Liz Loves Books.Com.
Liz Loves Books.Com. rated it 11 years ago
In the third novel in King's epic fantasy masterpiece, Roland, the Last Gunslinger, is moving ever closer to the Dark Tower, which haunts his dreams and nightmares. Pursued by the Ageless Stranger, he and his friends follow the perilous path to Lud, an urban wasteland. And crossing a desert of damna...
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