3.7 AVERAGE



Review
I always tried to read Stephen King after all he is considered to be the master of horror. I do not think he is but nevertheless I had to tried. This is the third tried. The fist was The Eyes of the Dragon and the second was Cell. They both were worthy of reading but not that spectacular. I tried to read It but I couldn't. I am now trying to read one story every few days in the anthology The Skeleton Crew.

Now this novel... This novel has some good premises. It is divided in one hundred and one chapters. Each one is at most two or three pages with few exceptions.There is also a movie with Arnold Schwarzenegger as Ben Richards. Never see in it but I will eventually. Now for the plot... Ben Richards is a poor guy with a lovingly wife and needs money to buy some medicine to his daughter so he enlists to participate in some violent games. He goes to a building where he do some tests and is chosen to participate in the most violent and most viewed game ever called the Running Man. The show is simple. He is now a runaway enemy of the state and each hour he is running his family receives 100 dollars (Which is a lot). In the event of surviving 30 days he can gain one bilion dollars. Suffice to say that no one has ever survived the game because their are some man , bounty hunters called hunters led by McCone. The only rule is that he must sent two tapes per day with messages.

As he runs he meets some people and at the same time we are presented with the world they live in. This novel is set on not so far future (2025) where America is a Totalitarian Dystopia and life is hard. The rich live well and the poor die or live to play the games to earn some money. The air around the cities is polluted to a bigger extent that most people have respiratory condicions.

Of course the game is fixed and he is seen as a bloody almost animal person (at the same time we know that this is the way the upper classes see lowborn classes). As he runs he capture Amelia Williams (a upper class) and makes her a hostages. As he go to a airport he threatens that he is carrying explosives. The lead hunter then is sent to the plane as a second hostage.

As he travels near cities to avoid being blow apart by misseles Killian tells him by a call that he knows that he's got no explosives and he offers him the lead hunter job. He thinks about it but is reluctant because of his wife and daughter becoming targets and at that time Killian tells him that his family is already dead, even before the first time he is shown on air, of course Killian tells him that him and the network had nothing to do with it. Killian then tells him to think about it. As Richards dreams he has a bad nightmare about the killing of his family and as he wokes up he tells Killian that he accepts the offer. After saying that he kills McCone and the rest of the crew and helps Amelia go off the plane with a parachute. After disabling the auto-pilot he makes the plane collide with the Games Building home of the Network.

This book was quite good I must say. I enjoy the characters and the setting. It reminds me of some older movies I've seen (maybe even the running man movie). There are some movies out there with future games full of violence. I know man is beast and we enjoy (at an extent) to see horrible news. We are capable when in a crownd to go berserk... look at the football games, or manifestations. Probably most people wouldn't do that kind of violence if alone but in a "pack" we are wolves in sheep clothes... I wonder where we are going as a society.

I have no major complains about the novel. I think Ben Richards had probably gone to better places to escape The Network and the hunters and that trouble me. Well I will read as I said Skeleton Crew (featuring the novella which was converted to the film The Mist)

Cuando leí el nombre original de este libro se encendieron mis alarmas: The running man. ¿Tenía algo que ver con esa película de los 80´s, donde un joven Arnold Schwarzenegger era perseguido por motoqueros con sierras eléctricas? Wikipedia respondió: ¡¡Yes!!
Ante esa contundente respuesta tuve algunas dudas. No tenía buenos recuerdos de esa película. Pese a ello me lancé a la aventura

Esta novela es una distopia. Una sociedad que se divierte con programas de TV, donde la gente que no tiene dinero se juega la vida tratando de conseguirlo (literalmente). “El fugitivo” es el show estrella. En horario prime puedes ver como los participantes son cazados por las calles de la ciudad. Si logran sobrevivir un número de días ganan un millonario premio. Pero nadie lo ha logrado... y ahora Ben Richards tendrá que jugar, para pagar la salud de su pequeña hija.

Hay que reconocer que la idea central es muy atractiva y tiene una alta dosis de crítica social. Me gustó el ritmo que tiene y algunos momentos de acción te llevan al borde del asiento. Ahora, no esperen una obra muy desarrollada, con grandes personajes o un mundo muy detallado. El general todo es bastante simple. Pero aun así es entretenido y sobre todo logra que empatices con el personaje principal y su noble causa. Sintiendo en carne propia su angustia cuando es perseguido.

Sin duda es una novela original y por suerte es mejor que la película. Aunque tienen un gran elemento en común: Una sociedad que está completamente loca.
adventurous tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: No
adventurous dark tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: No
dark tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: No
adventurous dark sad tense fast-paced

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Stephen King realmente no tiene límites. El fugitivo es prueba de que no hay género que se le resista: en este caso, una historia distópica y futurista, pero cargada de una metáfora potente sobre nuestra sociedad actual.
Con mucha acción y tensión constante, el libro no solo entretiene, también lanza una crítica afilada —aunque justa— al rol de la televisión, cómo manipula la verdad y dirige la percepción pública. A pesar de haber sido escrito hace décadas, su vigencia es inquietante.
Un King distinto, pero igual de brillante.
adventurous dark emotional sad tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
dark sad tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

Interesting plot but the sheer amount of slurs in this is crazy even if you factor in when it was written. I think making Ben Richards a bad guy is a good idea because it's a reminder that even bad people deserve equal treatment and a life. Just be aware that it can be alot. Some of the descriptions are tough to get through.

I did enjoy the plot though I think the record time being
8 days
really hammers in how cruel and futile this programme is. The concept of public involvement in the show being rewarded is fascinating and I could unfortunately easily conceive of that happening if a show like this was introduced. I also loved the showcasing of people fighting back and class solidarity among some characters.

Overall, It felt tense and I enjoyed reading most of it. It just felt abit over the top sometimes and I feel there are more interesting ways to get the reader to dislike someone than just chucking racism in and calling it a day. 

Expand filter menu Content Warnings

My first Stephen King book and unfortunately I don't think I will be back for more.

I am usually a fan of dystopian fiction, but this one failed to be substantial and immersive. The idea of The Running Man Show promised something thrilling and tense but it was barely so in reality.