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Stephen KingA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
How might Barbie represent the “everyman” character? How does his relationship with the town—his reasons for coming in the first place, his desires to leave, his changing role throughout the crisis—reflect the ways that the average citizen might related to their “hometown” or even “home country”?
How do Big Jim Rennie’s evangelical beliefs collide with, or perhaps even justify, his illegal activities? Do you think his motivations are a comment on human nature, on religion, both, or on something else?
Do you think that Junior Rennie is more like or more different from his father? How? Does either character warrant sympathy from the reader? Why or why not?
By Stephen King
11.22.63
Stephen King
1408
Stephen King
Bag of Bones
Stephen King
Billy Summers
Stephen King
Carrie
Stephen King
Children of the Corn
Stephen King
Cujo
Stephen King
Different Seasons
Stephen King
Doctor Sleep
Stephen King
Dolores Claiborne
Stephen King
Duma Key
Stephen King
Elevation: A Novel
Stephen King
End of Watch
Stephen King
Fairy Tale
Stephen King
Finders Keepers
Stephen King
Firestarter
Stephen King
From a Buick 8
Stephen King
Full Dark, No Stars
Stephen King
Gerald's Game
Stephen King
Gwendy's Button Box
Stephen King, Richard Chizmar