#20 – Doctor Sleep
Plot
Stephen King returns to the characters and territory of one of his most popular novels ever, The Shining, in this instantly riveting novel about the now middle-aged Dan Torrance (the boy protagonist of The Shining) and the very special 12-year-old girl he must save from a tribe of murderous paranormals.
Review
Despite my intention of reading all newly published Stephen King material during this journey, I did not read Doctor Sleep until nearly six years after it was available. The reasoning was that since this was a sequel to The Shining, it would make sense to read it after I had finished The Shining. Some decisions are better than others, but this was one of my better ones.
The development of Danny (now Dan) Torrance was fascinating and resonated on a deep/emotional level for me since I had just completed The Shining. Reading about his struggles – both immediately after The Shining – and now decades later, were as compelling as anything King has written.
In perfect King-like fashion, once Dan starts moving past the events from The Shining he is thrown immediately into a new adventure that can’t help but bring up those old, horrible memories.
And that adventure – is completely captivating. King develops a tremendous plotline from a grounded storyline that has just the right amount of supernatural. The fact that King can tell this tale from multiple points of view was another fascinating development from this undeniably terrific novel.
Details
Pages: 531
Dates Read: April – May 2019
Quote: “FEAR stands for fuck everything and run.”
Best Part: Dan revisits the Overlook Hotel.
Hint for #19: To my knowledge this is the only novel Stephen King co-wrote with his son.
Until next time, peace be the journey.




