Let me first start by saying that The Stand is a very good book. However, I was disappointed based on all the people raving about it. I read IT just before The Stand and loved it. And people have said that The Stand is even better. I found IT to be much more exciting, and a better read. Here are my issues with The Stand.
First of all, there seemed to be so many technical errors and liberties taken. Most of the time I can shrug them off, but after a while they tend to get irritating. For example, how come people can get superflu when no one around is contagious? Even if you assume it to be air born, are we supposed to believe that the virus survived for 9 months with no hosts? Granted, I'm not a doctor and maybe I'm completely wrong; it may be possible. But it seems too farfetched even for Stephen King.
Also, at some point in the book (i forgot where exactly) it was clearly concluded that immunity to the virus was not in any way genetically based. And this conclusion was rational since there were no known cases of two family members surviving. Certainly, if there was any genetic basis to it, then family members would be fairly common in the free zone. Yet, at the end, they conclude that the immunity is genetic and Fran's baby lives because it has Fran's half of the immunity, and that two immune couple will certainly make an immune baby.
Another more trivial one is that Harold and Larry both were able to siphon gas out of a ground well. Its almost common knowledge that a siphon does not work against gravity.
Another minor one that always puzzled me was Harold's "risky" task of painting the words on the barn roof. I don't understand why his feet had to be dangling off the edge off the roof. Who said he had to be directly under the letters when painting them? Why couldn't he paint them on upside down or just stand to the side of them as he painted?
This was very trivial, but I also couldn't figure out why Flagg kept switch back and forth between being extremely hot and extremely cold. Its like King couldn't make up his mind on whether he wanted him to represent the devil by being hot and radiating heat, or having a cold chill pass through people in his presence.
Oh and why were there all kinds of things running like saws and blenders in the free zone when the power was turned on? Who gets terminally ill with such a debilitating virus and then decides to go cut some wood or bake a cake seconds before dieing? The book seemed full of little stuff like this that became frustrating.
Lastly, I am not a feminist by any means, but there were certainly tones of sexism that I did not appreciate. Fran at one point thanked all men for their sacrifices essentially concluded that they are much more important than women after the apocalypse.
I want to reiterate that I did like the book. Overall, it was very good, and its a shame that it had so many of these minor flaws. I know there's a lot of diehard fans that are not going to like this post, and I'm just hope that I don't end up in a cage with two square holes and handcuff-chains.




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