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World Famous Comics: The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon (Limited Edition): A Pop-up Book
The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon (Limited Edition): A Pop-up Book
By: Stephen King, Kees Moerbeek
Publisher: Little Simon
Average Rating:3.50 out of 5.00 stars
Binding: Hardcover
Label: Little Simon
Number of Items: 1
Number of Pages: 7
Publication Date: November 16, 2004
Reading Level: Ages 9-12

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The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon (Limited Edition): A Pop-up Book
3rd Party New: $2,098.47
Amazon's Price: $2,098.47

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Editorial Comments

Product Description:
Stephen King's award-winning, best-selling novel The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon is stunningly told in this, the first pop-up book by the master of suspense. It is a fairy tale grimmer than Grimm, retold with intricate pop-ups and a breathtaking text. This is the ultimate must-have edition for Stephen King fans of all ages.

Limited pop up package includes: pop-up with acetate, mylar, foil stamping, pull-tabs: full-cloth binding in full-cloth slipcase; additional pop-up on front cover. Signed and numbered for collectibility.

Amazon.com Review:
With a convincing mix of youthful optimism and world-weary resignation, reader Anne Heche adds resonance to this unabridged recording. Heche is especially effective as the 9-year-old heroine, Trisha McFarland, who makes a fateful decision during an afternoon hike with her dysfunctional family. "The paths had forked in a 'Y.' She would simply walk across the gap and rejoin the main trail. Piece of cake. There was no chance of getting lost." As one might suspect, there is every chance she'll get lost--or worse--and taking the shortcut turns out to be a very bad choice indeed. At times Heche's reading may be too measured, but her narration is generally quite good and her steady portrayal of a young girl lost renders this tale all the more frightening. (Running time: 6.5 hours, 6 cassettes) --George Laney


Customer Reviews
Average Rating:3.50 out of 5.00 stars

4 out of 5 starsAwesome story.
I don't always like Stephen King (he's a superb storyteller, but many of his endings just kill me), but I LOVED this book. It's not a typical King novel.

I found the story to be remarkable. It is about a journey into strength and survival of a young girl that gets lost in the woods. Through her struggles, she ponders her current family dynamics. Her parents have divorced. Her brother and mom can't get along.

This young girl sees herself as the peacemaker for everyone. Indeed, she is one tough cookie! I adored her. As she ponders her problems, and fantasizes about her crush on Tom Gordon, it is clear that one great message of the story is about the truly important things in life. In the end, I just knew that the little girl's family understood what was important in life...as did I.



5 out of 5 starsgood place to buy from
I received the book I ordered in a very timely manner, and it is a beautiful copy



1 out of 5 starsdissapointing is an understatement
i have found nothing but praise for this book in the reviews i sought out after wasting my time finishing this book, looking forward to reading common discontent views on this, the biggest let down i have read in some time from an author i had grown to appreciate. have read in other reviews about the suspense created in this book and was thrown back at others' mention of horror! this is not horror to put it plain and to the point. this book is about a lost (and very exaggerated) nine year old walking through the woods near canada somewhere. that is it. so she just keeps walking, of course stumbling in and through to the very poor to life threatening natural conditions which are obvious, expected and unremarkable as a whole. several times it seems as though King forgets that this girl is nine as he writes her, based on my comparison to my nine year old daughter and the girlfriends she has stay over. initially i am under the notion that this is going to be a 'bug horror' type story when trisha is accosted by several winged insects at the beginning of her journey. that passes as she makes her way into a swamp where you would think there is going to be a peak of an overwhelming infestation but instead is where the insect theory is stunted by decreasing mention of that particular problem. the 'creature' that follows her loosely through the story is sparsely mentioned at all and when King actually bothers, the lack of details is discouraging and vague, not the suspense creating vague either, the 'should i even make note of that' vague. i about threw the book across the room on page 170 (which i bookmarked after overcoming that urge) where the chapter closes up with the bold statement that pretty much nothing of interest is in this books near future and there is no distant future when you are over two thirds of your way through the book. i have not reviewed books before being inspired by this book to take time to vent about my discontent with this book. i honestly am not a nay-sayer by any means and really am normally pretty happy just being able to have time to read anything. perhaps i simply expected more from this book because it was written by king and i had great previous experiences reading his larger novels.



3 out of 5 starswell written as usual, just not very substantial
At this point it is a cliche to state that Stephen King could make a best seller out of a grocery list. And while that term is used mostly as a derogatory statement, I feel it also implies that King has found his stride as a popular author to the point where he could actually make a page turner out of a shopping list. The man certainly has an innate sense of pacing and plot timing.

THE GIRL WHO LOVED TOM GORDON gets right to it, with the protagonist getting lost in the woods right at the start. the point of view of a 9 year old girl is told believably, and king doesn't resort to making his child protagonist some gosh-gee innocent at the mercy of the woods. She's actually quite resourceful, but never to the point of feeling implausible; King found a satisfying middle-ground. What feels a little less satisfying was the ending. It was not all that dramatic, after 200 pages of something lurking in the woods, especially for a book that keeps bringing up Tom Gordon's being a 'closer'. Mr. King needs to work on his own closing skills, methinks.

Some readers may find the book to be scary, but I think it's pretty tame, although I suspect it wasn't King's intention to make a flat-out horror story, anyway. Rather, it is part harrowing survival story, part contemplation on faith. The survival elements push the plot along briskly and with the collective force of an author in his prime; the spiritual elements, however, may not be King's forte. King has delt with the intervention of the divine before (The Stand, Desperation, etc.), but having the little girl becoming more and more detached from reality through sickness and weariness, King stays ambiguous as to whether or not the divine really is intervening to help the girl, or whether her belief in something is ,in itself, what helps her to persevere. This is all well and good, However the ambiguity was compromised by the inclusion a certain plot device. Without spoiling anything, the girl's knowledge of a certain object days before she gets to it seems to make it very obvious that there is no ambiguity by the end. What could have been something that each reader could have subjectively taken differenty is instead spelled right out, which undermines some of the point. I have zero problem with books that deal with the Divine, but I thought King set out to deliberately confuse what is real and not by making his protagonist venturing on an aboriginal 'vision quest', however, he does not keep it that way and spoils the signifigance of a 'what is true' story with facts that point the way.

The book is a short read, and will probably take most readers no more than a couple days to get through. It's length is appropriate to tell the story, but there isn't a whole lot of substance to it. It sort of feels like it took King only a little longer to write then it does for the audience to read. I don't mean to bash mr. King, but I'm just comparing it to his earlier works, and like THE COLORADO KID he seems to be making a short, brief, and quaint book that is neither at the top of his literary peaks, nor his horror best.

recommended if you wawnt something light to read on a trip, or a page-turner while on vacation. I suspect the story won't stick with you long after you've finished it.



5 out of 5 starsPage Turner!
Once again Stephen King has come through for us! This book was a real page turner. It was very rich in details and suspense.


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