New York Times Fiction Bestsellers: September 19, 2021
Delivered: 9/14/2021 8:00:00 PM
Writer Margaret Renkl's sense of joyful belonging to the South co-exists with her intense desire for Southerners who face prejudice or poverty finally to be embraced and supported.
(Image credit: Milkweed Editions)
UnCovered review by Stephanie Baker, ACLS IT
Stephen King announced his retirement in 2002, and then along came over 20 more novels, novellas, and collections. Among them are new classics such as Under the Dome, 11/22/63, the Bill Hodges Trilogy, the awaited Holly Gibney Series, and now Billy Summers.
All of King’s post 2002 works, including this one, exhibit an easiness and flow to his writing that he was arguably lacking in a few of his publications preceding his ‘retirement’ (in this reviewer’s humble opinion anyway). However, what makes Billy Summers different is its noticeable absence of the otherworldly. Billy is just a man who’s - with the brief exception of a scenario raising the Overlook Hotel - life experiences, past and present, have solid footing in reality. As many of King’s protagonists are, Billy Summers is an anti-hero; a gun-man for hire for which you can’t help but like and root. Throughout the novel, the King of Horror spotlights the horrors of the real world by weaving in issues of the times: Afghanistan, the #METOO movement, child trafficking, domestic abuse, and even prescient references to the looming pandemic.
Billy Summers is an assassin and an avenger with a heart and, yes, even a moral code because whether something or someone is good or bad is not always cut and dry in any of King’s novels. This is also true of other primary characters in the story; Alice a young woman wronged, who becomes Billy’s companion and champion, and Bucky, Billy’s servicer and enabler living on the edge. King even manages to redeem the mob figures who double cross Billy without justifying their way of life.
This novel presents a new Stephen King at his former best. If you are a fan or just starting his considerable library, you won’t be disappointed here. As Billy Summers reveals his own story through the writing of a sham novel-that-is-really-a-memoir, you are given a window into Stephen King’s own use of writing as catharsis. Let’s hope this is not “one last job,“ Dear Reader, because as long as Mr. King remains ‘retired’ I’m looking forward to more of his process and what is yet to come.
Cassandra Khaw's new novel follows a rag-tag band of criminals who have to pull together for one last heist — but in their hands, what could be an ordinary tale becomes visionary sci-fi adventure.
(Image credit: Erewhon)