Particularize About Books The Green Mile, Part 1: The Two Dead Girls (The Green Mile #1)
Title | : | The Green Mile, Part 1: The Two Dead Girls (The Green Mile #1) |
Author | : | Stephen King |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 92 pages |
Published | : | October 1st 1996 by Bt Bound (first published March 1996) |
Categories | : | Horror. Fiction. Thriller |
Stephen King
Paperback | Pages: 92 pages Rating: 4.52 | 30981 Users | 381 Reviews
Rendition In Pursuance Of Books The Green Mile, Part 1: The Two Dead Girls (The Green Mile #1)
They were sisters, and the picture-perfect image of innocence. No one understood their brutal deaths, not even the man who killed them. But John Coffey is about to gain a new insight, about his life in prison, and about the one man who will walk him down that green mile . . . toward destiny.Prepare yourself for Stephen King's boldest exercise in nerve-twisting suspense. A multi-part serial novel that begins on death row and goes on from there to realms of revelation that make death seem sweet. This is Stephen King's most irresistible journey ever.
To be continued . . .
--back cover
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Define Books In Favor Of The Green Mile, Part 1: The Two Dead Girls (The Green Mile #1)
Original Title: | The Green Mile, Part 1: The Two Dead Girls |
ISBN: | 0613096487 (ISBN13: 9780613096485) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | The Green Mile #1 |
Setting: | Louisiana(United States) |
Rating About Books The Green Mile, Part 1: The Two Dead Girls (The Green Mile #1)
Ratings: 4.52 From 30981 Users | 381 ReviewsAssessment About Books The Green Mile, Part 1: The Two Dead Girls (The Green Mile #1)
This is book 1 of a series and only 100 pages long. I already saw the movie so I knew what was going to happen. It's heartbreaking what happened to the little girls.My First Stephen King Novel and I'm glad that I started off with this series. Despite its short length it was very intriguing. And though it ended kind of plainly rather than in a cliffhanger, the theme of the series would definitely pique your interest to read the sequels of the same. :) The setting of the story vaguely reminds me of Shawshank Redemption though.
Original review I wrote at 2:45 AM, exhausted: Very good start to the beginning of "The Green Mile" series. Enjoyed several different parts of the story and the set up for more. Can't wait for two!More thorough review at 7:13 PM, sort of tired: I have really enjoyed the first part of this serial novel. I am also genuinely surprised by how much I've enjoyed the beginning of this book although I am a fan of the movie. I guess the reason I am so surprised is because I've always written Stephen King
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I picked the 6 part chapbooks up on a whim in a used book store and read this first instalment on the bus home. Mannn is King a good writer. Everything was gripping; the story, the characterisation, the narrator, the setting, even the eerie cover art. The mood is so grim/ dingy in a way that made me lament the misery people experience on death row (especially during the Great Depression) and reaffirmed my opposition to capital punishment (even though some kind of punition is obviously due when
"Your name is John Coffey." "Yes sir boss, like the drink, only not spelled the same way." Who doesn't love the gifted giant of a man in THE GREEN MILE? When I purchased THE TWO DEAD GIRLS, I had already read THE GREEN MILE so I knew what was coming, but thought perhaps it would be a more detailed account of the incident....or should I say horror of what happened to the two young sisters, but it is indeed pretty much the same....if memory serves. One part I didn't recall though was mention of a
Movies! I remember watching this one when it came out! It's so odd to be reading the tale a few decades later without even having a desire to watch the movie. :)It turns out that Hanks with a prostate problem was NOT the most memorable part of the movie. It's the mouse, of course. The main character is always the mouse, and I'm not even referring to Steamboat Willie.The short story is mild and reflective, even with the scent of rape, murder and peppermint, which is odd, all considered. And yet,
I havent read a Stephen King book in ages and its all flooding back to me how easy his work is to get through! Its engulfing!
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