The Drawing of the Three

Front Cover
Penguin, 2003 - Fiction - 463 pages
In 1978, Stephen King introduced the world to the last gunslinger, Roland of Gilead. Nothing has been the same since. More than twenty years later, the quest for the Dark Tower continues to take readers on a wildly epic ride. Through parallel worlds and across time, Roland must brave desolate wastelands and endless deserts, drifting into the unimaginable and the familiar. A classic tale of colossal scope--crossing over terrain from "The Stand," "The Eyes of the Dragon," "Insomnia," "The Talisman," "Black House," "Hearts in Atlantis," "'Salem's Lot," and other familiar King haunts--the adventure takes hold with the turn of each page.
And the tower awaits....
The Second Volume in the Epic Dark Tower Series...
The Drawing of the Three
While pursuing his quest for the Dark Tower through a world that is a nightmarishly distorted mirror image of our own, Roland is drawn through a mysterious door that brings him into contemporary America.
Here he links forces with the defiant young Eddie Dean, and with the beautiful, brilliant, and brave Odetta Holmes, in a savage struggle against underworld evil and otherworldly enemies.
Once again, Stephen King has masterfully interwoven dark, evocative fantasy and icy realism.
 

Contents

IV
15
V
23
VI
25
VII
42
VIII
63
IX
96
X
141
XI
183
XIV
258
XV
283
XVI
359
XVII
361
XVIII
376
XIX
391
XX
429
XXI
453

XII
213
XIII
243
XXII
455
XXIII

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2003)

Stephen King lives in Maine and Florida with his wife, novelist Tabitha King. He has written more than forty books and two hundred short stories. He has won the World Fantasy Award, several Bram Stoker awards, and the O. Henry Award for his story "The Man in the Black Suit," and is the 2003 recipient of The National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters.
His Dark Tower books include: "The Gunslinge"r, "The Drawing of the Three," "The Waste Lands," "Wizard and Glass," "The Wind Through the Keyhole," "Wolves of the Calla," "Song of Susannah," and "The Dark Tower."

Bibliographic information