tsvallender reviewed Cell: A Novel by Stephen King
Review of 'Cell' on 'Goodreads'
3 stars
Following review is from my blog: fromtheunderworld.blogspot.com/2011/10/stephen-kings-cell.html
You can't go too far wrong when picking up a Stephen King novel. When he's on top form, you're going to get a genuine classic, when he's not you're still going to get an absorbing, easy to read, exciting romp. Lately I've been bemoaning how King simply is the horror genre for many people (just take a look at the most popular horror on Goodreads), but there's good reason for it: he's consistently awesome. Despite the subject matter, for me and many others, King is the go-to for a comfort read.
This is why although I can say Cell is one of his worst novels, I can simultaneously say I enjoyed it, and can recommend it.
Cell opens with a pulse being sent out through mobile phones that turns people into mindless zombie-type creatures, and this sets the stage nicely for a standard zombie-type story. So it's a pleasant surprise when the effects of the pulse begin to change and the tale becomes increasingly original. What's a shame is that the originality isn't always for the best. Although the cause of the pulse is never explained (as these things generally aren't, and usually for the best as most explanations are just shoddy), when King begins to explain the way the pulse works it falls a little flat. When he's describing the way both the human brain and computer systems work, it can seem strained at the least.
But this doesn't detract too badly from what is a solid work. It's a good novel to lose yourself in on a lazy day, best digested in a few big sittings. At times it's reminiscent of a sort of The Stand-lite, which is no complaint.
Although King has finished a screenplay, a movie doesn't seem to be on the horizon any time soon, which is a shame as the writing was extremely cinematic. Whilst Eli Roth was attached to the project, he left over "differences in opinion". King's also stated that he's changed the ending in the screenplay, which is highly intriguing as the ending was one of my primary gripes. The novel ends with a cliffhanger, and while I've nothing against this when done well, neither of the possible options - which I'll refrain from spoiling - are particularly satisfying.
So if you like the sound of an easy read infection novel with a sprinkling of originality, by all means dive in, just don't be expecting his best work.