The Dark Tower/The Waste Lands: Difference between revisions

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{{work|page=The Dark Tower/The Waste Lands|wppage=The Dark Tower III: The Waste Lands}}
{{work}}
{{Infobox book
{{quote box|[[File:wastelandscover_5881.jpg|frame]]}}Preceded by ''[[The Dark Tower (Literature)/The Drawing of the Three|The Dark Tower]]''.
| title = The Waste Lands
| image = wastelandscover_5881.jpg
| caption =
| author = Stephen King
| central theme =
| elevator pitch =
| genre = Dark fantasy, Horror, Science fiction, Western
| franchise = The Dark Tower
| preceded by = The Dark Tower/The Drawing of the Three
| followed by = The Dark Tower/Wizard and Glass
| publication date = August 1991
}}
Preceded by ''[[The Dark Tower/The Drawing of the Three|The Drawing of the Three]]''.


Book 3 of [[Stephen King]]'s ''[[The Dark Tower]]'', released in 1991, has two parts. In the first, the [[Temporal Paradox]] the [[The Dark Tower (Literature)/The Drawing of the Three|previous book]] created makes [[The Gunslinger|Roland]] begin to [[Sanity Slippage|lose his mind]]. In the second, the [[True Companions|ka-tet]], now including the [[Death Is Cheap|recently resurrected]] [[What Do You Mean Its Not for Kids|Jake]] continue their journey, get caught, escape and move on.
Book 3 of [[Stephen King]]'s ''[[The Dark Tower]]'', released in 1991, has two parts. In the first, the [[Temporal Paradox]] the [[The Dark Tower/The Drawing of the Three|previous book]] created makes [[The Gunslinger|Roland]] begin to [[Sanity Slippage|lose his mind]]. In the second, the [[True Companions|ka-tet]], now including the [[Death Is Cheap|recently resurrected]] [[What Do You Mean It's Not for Kids?|Jake]] continue their journey, get caught, escape and move on.


Followed by ''[[The Dark Tower (Literature)/Wizard and Glass|Wizard and Glass]]''.
Followed by ''[[The Dark Tower/Wizard and Glass|Wizard and Glass]]''.
----
=== This book contains examples of: ===


{{tropelist}}
* [[Attack of the 50 Foot Whatever]] - Shardik, a gigantic cyborg bear attacks the protagonists at the beginning of the book.
* [[A God Am I]]: Deconstructed by Blaine. {{spoiler|He knews full well he's not a god, but people just refused to see him as anything else, so he decided to lean into the trope, and a large part of why he's so sadistic is because of his annoyance with the blind fanatics who worship him.}}
* [[AI Is a Crapshoot]] - Shardik, Blaine, and Patricia all went crazy years before the start of the series.
* [[Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever]] - Shardik, a gigantic cyborg bear attacks the protagonists at the beginning of the book.
* [[A.I. Is a Crapshoot]] - Shardik, Blaine, and Patricia all went crazy years before the start of the series.
* [[Arc Words]] - Among others, 'Blaine is a pain'.
* [[Arc Words]] - Among others, 'Blaine is a pain'.
* [[Cliff Hanger]] - Mighty fine one. Readers had to wait six years for the resolution.
* [[Cliff Hanger]] - Mighty fine one. Readers had to wait six years for the resolution.
* [[Cool Train]] - Blaine the Mono
* [[Cool Train]] - Blaine the Mono
** Blaine is a pain.
** Blaine is a pain.
** And that is the truth.
** And that is the truth.
* [[Driven to Suicide]]: {{spoiler|Patricia}}, egged on by {{spoiler|Blaine}}.
* [[Driven to Suicide]]: {{spoiler|Patricia}}, egged on by {{spoiler|Blaine}}.
* [[Everyone Is Jesus in Purgatory]] - Parodied in Jake's essay
* [[Everyone Is Jesus in Purgatory]] - Parodied in Jake's essay
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* [[Horny Devils]]: The Oracle. Sex with an incubus here is portrayed as very unpleasant and painful.
* [[Horny Devils]]: The Oracle. Sex with an incubus here is portrayed as very unpleasant and painful.
* [[I Have Many Names]] - Flagg says this very line.
* [[I Have Many Names]] - Flagg says this very line.
* [[It Tastes Like Feet]]: Eddie asks Roland if billy-bumblers make good eating. Roland answers no, they're horrible: tough and gamy, and he'd sooner eat dog. When quizzed, he confirms that, yes, he's also eaten dog meat.
* [[It Tastes Like Feet]]: Eddie asks Roland if billy-bumblers make good eating. Roland answers no, they're horrible: tough and gamy, and he'd sooner eat dog. When quizzed, he confirms that, yes, he's also eaten dog meat.
* [[Jedi Mind Trick]] - The key.
* [[Jedi Mind Trick]] - The key.
* [[Jerkass]] - Blaine. ''Dear God''.
* [[Jerkass]] - Blaine. ''Dear God''.
* [[Kick the Dog|Kick The Billybumbler]] - Gasher literally does this.
* [[Kick the Dog|Kick The Billybumbler]] - Gasher literally does this.
* [[Literary Allusion Title]]: To [[TS Eliot]]'s "[[The Waste Land]]". Part of the poem is used as an [[Epigraph]] and in-story Susannah quotes it.
* [[Literary Allusion Title]]: To [[T. S. Eliot]]'s "[[The Waste Land]]". Part of the poem is used as an [[Epigraph]] and in-story Susannah quotes it.
* [[Living Lie Detector]]: Blaine can determine if someone is lying with 97% accuracy by using voice analysis.
* [[Living Lie Detector]]: Blaine can determine if someone is lying with 97% accuracy by using voice analysis.
* [[Meaningful Name]] - The city of Lud, whose surface inhabitants have forgotten what technology is and now fear it. At one point near the end, the point is made explicit when they are referred to as Luddites.
* [[Meaningful Name]] - The city of Lud, whose surface inhabitants have forgotten what technology is and now fear it. At one point near the end, the point is made explicit when they are referred to as Luddites.
* [[Mordor]] - the titular Waste Lands, a vast area beyond the city of Lud which Roland and his ka-tet must cross with Blaine's dubious help.
* [[Mordor]] - the titular Waste Lands, a vast area beyond the city of Lud which Roland and his ka-tet must cross with Blaine's dubious help.
* [[Nightmare Fuel]] - ''Charlie the Choo-choo'' terrifies all the characters.
* [[Nightmare Fuel]] - ''Charlie the Choo-choo'' terrifies all the characters.
* [[No Indoor Voice]]: Blaine. ''At least ... none that he's consciously aware of ...''
* [[No Indoor Voice]]: Blaine. ''At least ... none that he's consciously aware of ...''
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* [[Subverted Kids Show]] - ''Charlie the Choo-choo'' is an example of a subverted kids' storybook.
* [[Subverted Kids Show]] - ''Charlie the Choo-choo'' is an example of a subverted kids' storybook.
* [[Must Make Amends]]
* [[Must Make Amends]]
* [[Ripple Effect Proof Memory]]: Deconstructed. Roland remembers two versions of a certain crucial event, and it slowly drives him insane.
* [[Ripple-Effect-Proof Memory]]: Deconstructed. Roland remembers two versions of a certain crucial event, and it slowly drives him insane.
* [[Temporal Paradox]]: The hitch of the plot in the first half is Roland remembering {{spoiler|how he got Jake killed off in the first book}}, as well as an alternate series of events. Since both are technically true, he can't really make his mind settle on our or the other, which induces this effect on his own memory.
* [[Temporal Paradox]]
* [[The Seventies]] - Jake comes from 1977.
* [[The Seventies]] - Jake comes from 1977.
* [[True Art Is Incomprehensible]] - The main reason Jake gets an A+ for his essay.
* [[True Art Is Incomprehensible]] - The main reason Jake gets an A+ for his essay.
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{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:The Nineties]]
[[Category:The Dark Tower]]
[[Category:The Dark Tower]]
[[Category:Works By Stephen King]]
[[Category:Fantasy Literature]]
[[Category:Fantasy Literature]]
[[Category:Western Literature]]
[[Category:Western Literature]]
[[Category:The Waste Lands]]
[[Category:The Waste Lands]]
[[Category:Literature of the 1990s]]
[[Category:Pages with working Wikipedia tabs]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dark Tower, The/The Waste Lands}}

Latest revision as of 17:29, 13 February 2024

The Waste Lands
Written by: Stephen King
Central Theme:
Synopsis:
Genre(s): Dark fantasy, Horror, Science fiction, Western
Series: The Dark Tower
Preceded by: The Dark Tower/The Drawing of the Three
Followed by: The Dark Tower/Wizard and Glass
First published: August 1991
v · d · e

Preceded by The Drawing of the Three.

Book 3 of Stephen King's The Dark Tower, released in 1991, has two parts. In the first, the Temporal Paradox the previous book created makes Roland begin to lose his mind. In the second, the ka-tet, now including the recently resurrected Jake continue their journey, get caught, escape and move on.

Followed by Wizard and Glass.

Tropes used in The Dark Tower/The Waste Lands include:
  • A God Am I: Deconstructed by Blaine. He knews full well he's not a god, but people just refused to see him as anything else, so he decided to lean into the trope, and a large part of why he's so sadistic is because of his annoyance with the blind fanatics who worship him.
  • Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever - Shardik, a gigantic cyborg bear attacks the protagonists at the beginning of the book.
  • A.I. Is a Crapshoot - Shardik, Blaine, and Patricia all went crazy years before the start of the series.
  • Arc Words - Among others, 'Blaine is a pain'.
  • Cliff Hanger - Mighty fine one. Readers had to wait six years for the resolution.
  • Cool Train - Blaine the Mono
    • Blaine is a pain.
    • And that is the truth.
  • Driven to Suicide: Patricia, egged on by Blaine.
  • Everyone Is Jesus in Purgatory - Parodied in Jake's essay
  • Everything Is Worse With Bears - Especially 50-foot tall, millennia old parasite-ridden cyborg god bears.
  • Fan Disservice: How the ka-tet holds off the Oracle.
  • Genius Loci - The Plaster Man
  • Horny Devils: The Oracle. Sex with an incubus here is portrayed as very unpleasant and painful.
  • I Have Many Names - Flagg says this very line.
  • It Tastes Like Feet: Eddie asks Roland if billy-bumblers make good eating. Roland answers no, they're horrible: tough and gamy, and he'd sooner eat dog. When quizzed, he confirms that, yes, he's also eaten dog meat.
  • Jedi Mind Trick - The key.
  • Jerkass - Blaine. Dear God.
  • Kick The Billybumbler - Gasher literally does this.
  • Literary Allusion Title: To T. S. Eliot's "The Waste Land". Part of the poem is used as an Epigraph and in-story Susannah quotes it.
  • Living Lie Detector: Blaine can determine if someone is lying with 97% accuracy by using voice analysis.
  • Meaningful Name - The city of Lud, whose surface inhabitants have forgotten what technology is and now fear it. At one point near the end, the point is made explicit when they are referred to as Luddites.
  • Mordor - the titular Waste Lands, a vast area beyond the city of Lud which Roland and his ka-tet must cross with Blaine's dubious help.
  • Nightmare Fuel - Charlie the Choo-choo terrifies all the characters.
  • No Indoor Voice: Blaine. At least ... none that he's consciously aware of ...
    • Also true of Jake's father.
  • Only Smart People May Pass - Blaine forces our heroes to display their knowledge of... prime numbers!
  • Split Personality - Blaine has the AI version. Eddie refers to the two personalities (the aggressive one who TALKS IN CAPITALS and the quiet, sane one who doesn't) as Big Blaine and Little Blaine.
  • Subverted Kids Show - Charlie the Choo-choo is an example of a subverted kids' storybook.
  • Must Make Amends
  • Ripple-Effect-Proof Memory: Deconstructed. Roland remembers two versions of a certain crucial event, and it slowly drives him insane.
  • Temporal Paradox: The hitch of the plot in the first half is Roland remembering how he got Jake killed off in the first book, as well as an alternate series of events. Since both are technically true, he can't really make his mind settle on our or the other, which induces this effect on his own memory.
  • The Seventies - Jake comes from 1977.
  • True Art Is Incomprehensible - The main reason Jake gets an A+ for his essay.
  • Wasteland Elder: Eddie daydreams about meeting some of these ("wise fuckin' elves!", he muses), who would give the ka-tet some food and supplies and maybe tell them the best route to the Dark Tower, when he sees the Lud skyline from a distance. He realizes, though, that the chances of them meeting anyone like that are slim to none (though they do meet some decent folk in River Crossing).