
Devin Jones is an early-twenties college student
with an unfaithful girlfriend, a mourning father, and a dead mother. In the summer of 1973 Devin takes a job at an amusement park in the small resort town of Heaven’s Bay, North Carolina, called Joyland. The summer changes Devin; he meets two
life-long friends, a murderer, a dying boy, and in the process discovers adulthood.
The story is centered on two primary events. The first is a murder in the funhouse of
Joyland, which occurred a few years before the story begins, and the second is
Devin’s introduction to a dying boy named Mike.
The two story lines run parallel, but neatly and satisfactorily collide
in the final climax.
Joyland
is
a carnival novel—every horror writer should have one—but it is much more. It is a coming of age story where the
protagonist is dragged into adulthood by circumstance; a truer understanding is
achieved, and the naiveté and brilliance of youth is forever lost. It is a sad and wistful tale, but it doesn’t
dwell on sorrow; rather it is more about hope than anything. The opening lines frame the mood and pacing
of the novel perfectly:
“I
had a car, but on most days in that fall of 1973 I walked to Joyland from Mrs.
Shoplaw’s Beachside Accommodations in the town of Heaven’s Bay. It seemed the right thing to do. The only thing, actually.”
Joyland
is
a small masterpiece. It is smoothly
readable, and while it tells a story of meaning it does so with a strong and interesting
story. It is anything but HCC’s usual
fare, but it is an appealing novel, which should be well liked by Mr King’s usual suspects, HCC’s readers, and
a bunch more. You should try this
one.
I am reading this novel at the moment actually. I'm just over half-way through and am thoroughly enjoying the story. This novel tells the sort of tale that melds itself with your brain while you are reading it and becomes a constant companion. Whatever I find myself doing these days, I am doing it with one foot in a wonderfully melancholy place called Joyland. I love it.
ReplyDeleteIt certainly stayed with me long after I read it, and I've been thinking about reading it again.
ReplyDeleteYou've sold me, Ben. I haven't read anything by King in ages. Your review has reminded me how engaging he can be. Time to get back the master.
ReplyDeleteMatt. I hope you like it. This is probably one of the top four or five novels I've read over the last few years. It really spoke to me.
ReplyDeleteA superb novel. One of the best I read this year.
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