King Stephen : Eyes of the Dragon by Stephen King

King Stephen : Eyes of the Dragon

by Stephen King

Once upon a time--
there was terror
and dragons and princes...evil wizards and dark dungeons...an enchanged castle and a terrible secret. With this enthralling masterpiece of magical evil and daring adventure, Stephen King takes you in his icy grip and leads you into the most shivery and irresistible kingdom of wickednes...
The Eyes of the Dragon

--back cover

Reviewed by Amber (The Literary Phoenix) on

5 of 5 stars

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The Eyes of the Dragon feels like a story that belongs in the ancient histories of Midworld.

That is to say… if you’ve read the Dark Tower series, King’s voice is familiar here. He uses terms like “baronies” which I’ve never heard in other fantasy novels. There is a Roland (our Roland Deschain’s namesake in his own world, perhaps? Or a coincidence?) and there is a wicked court magician named “Flagg”. And, of course, we know Flagg from The Stand and the Dark Tower series.

Of course, this is a different world and a different time, but there’s always that feel of a grander universe to Stephen King’s work, and so, things do fold into each other, don’t they?

Except for the beginning when King talks about… very adult things… the cadence of this story feels like a middle grade novel. It is not a childish tale, not one that is unenjoyable to adults. Rather, it is told by a “storyteller” figure and has the sort of charming, narrative feel that I remember from Iron-Hearted Violet. But it’s important to remember that The Eyes of the Dragon is a Stephen King novel, so there’s some crude imagery, some hysteria, some swearing, and some gore. I’m a fan of King’s fantasy, so the way this whole story was told felt very familiar to me, but those who come in for the horror may not expect this book.

It is the story of a kingdom, and of an evil wizard who has patiently waited for centuries for his moment to take over… and now it has arrived. The body of the story itself is a familiar one, and it’s fairly simple. The Eyes of the Dragon was meant to be told as a children’s tale to his daughter, and it is just the type of story I wish my parents had told me (aside from the crude imagery at the beginning… I’m all set there). It’s captivating with a variety of interesting characters whom you get to know very well. For King, this is even a short book, coming in at about a quarter of the length of his other, more renown works (looking at you, It).

My only complaint has nothing to do with the book, but with the audiobook’s narrator. For the most part, he was fine. But, for some reason, the choice was made to do Flagg’s dialogue in a harsh whisper. It just came off a bit strange and broke the flow a little. I wasn’t a fan of it, but it didn’t ruin the book.

I very much enjoyed The Eyes of the Dragon and its dual roles as fantasy and thriller. It was an easy read, but utterly engrossing, and I’ll definitely be checking out the Hulu series when it airs.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 18 September, 2019: Finished reading
  • 18 September, 2019: Reviewed