Ratings87
Average rating3.4
This official graphic novel adaptation of the horror novel by Stephen King and Owen King is a haunting interpretation of the chilling, timely bestseller. A bizarre sleeping sickness, called Aurora, has fallen over the world. Its victims can't wake up. And all of them are women. As nations fall into chaos, those women still awake take desperate measures to stay that way, and men everywhere begin to give in to their darkest impulses. Meanwhile, in the small town of Dooling, a mysterious woman has walked out of the woods; she calls herself Eve and leaves a trail of carnage in her wake. Strangest of all, she's the only woman who can wake up. Collects issues #1-5.
Featured Series
0 released booksSleeping Beauties is a 0-book series first released in 2017 with contributions by Rio Youers, Stephen King, and Owen King.
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August 2022 Hoopla Bonus Borrows Recomendation
I'm used to odd graphic novels but this was just too disjointed to follow.
Not as bad or overlong as many people on here would have you believe, but it's also not King seniors best, nor by any means his worst.
Instead of a really great fantasy story, with the undercurrent of the power dynamics between men and women and lots of food for thought, I read a book where the social commentary took precedence. This leads to a lot of sometimes dull, sometimes insufferable characters who exist mainly to fill their role, rather than engage my empathy and curiosity. Intellectually I was left cold as well. The central idea I pulled from this was that men are naturally violent abusers at worst and out of touch/out of control with their emotions at best. But when women are violent it''s because some man has pushed them into it, one way or another. There's some lip-service to women taking responsibility for their actions but that's not the overall vibe. I can't help but compare it to [b:The Stand 149267 The Stand Stephen King https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1213131305l/149267.SX50.jpg 1742269], which also featured a virus and a large cast of characters. That book was entertaining, filled with people who did incite emotions, negative or positive, and I was interested in learning about their fate. The end of The Stand didn't thrill me but at least I enjoyed the ride. The only interesting Sleeping Beauties' character was Dr. Flickinger, meth addict and plastic surgeon, who had very little to do with the story.Evie, the supernatural center of Sleeping Beauties, does not inspire the same level of fear/excitement as Randall Flagg. Somehow such a powerful being spends all her time locked in a cage. Where Flagg was free to roam, Evie's role is to manipulate in place. She wants two sides of men to fight over her body; there's Frank's group that wants to take her apart (for medical/scientific purposes), and Clint's group that wants to protect her. About half way through this incredibly long set-up to the finale, I was wishing it was over. The men are left to cope without their women, which they do to varying degrees. The ultimate outcome is left to the women, but the men can't do anything to affect it either way, so I'm not sure what the point was, especially as it turns out exactly the way you think it would. No new thoughts or surprises offered.