The first thing that gave me pause in this was the size of that Joshua tree in the beginning. I’ve never seen one that big, and I used to live out in the Nevada desert. So, I did a quick search and saw that they can get up to forty feet tall. Which is horrifying considering there are birds that like to impale their prey on them. But at the same time Joshua trees also mean potential food. Hopefully something better than camel spiders. Believe me those are one of the most horrifying thing to find crawling in your house or under your porch. If you live in the Nevada desert and you’ve got a porch they are likely a few under it. Anyway, this Joshua tree was dead so that explains why there wasn’t any meat on it. But it was large enough to cast a shadow, and if Roland was really that strapped for water, that’s the other thing he should have been searching for. Any long lasting shadow in the desert will have something growing out of it. Cucumber cactus has a lot of water in it. Prickly Pears are also a great source during the right seasons. But you gotta get to them fast because the day after they’re ripe they vanish. Wild animals usually get to them before anyone else has a chance. There is steep competition in the desert for survival. And anything that casts a shady spot casts a spot for other plants to thrive. But that’s nit picking, isn’t it? This is an entirely different world right? The plants may be entirely different. In the book I just assumed he knew about how to find water in the desert and all the tricks you can use to do so… Don’t worry, I’m not done nit picking yet.
In regard to Roland talking to himself and the line, “That’s never a good sign.” I hate it when people say this. It’s overused, over stated, and also a very modern concept which is mostly just used to belittle others. I know plenty of people who talk to themselves. Usually, they just have loud minds and need to organize their thoughts. They talk about the homework they have to finish and which they should do first, they talk about what ingredients they need to make for dinner, or they’re kids and their minds haven’t quieted down yet. For someone who’s been isolated, like Roland, it’s actually perfectly healthy for him to talk to himself, as long as he’s not expecting anyone to talk back. Once he starts expecting that then it’s a bad sign. But in all honesty, he’s in a desert, what else is there to listen to that’s half as comforting as a human voice? Believe me, I lived in the desert for years and the majority of other things you hear there is unsettling. One of the loudest things I heard was a pack of Cayotes moving around our house in the middle of the night. They sounded like crying demon children. Very unsettling. Who wouldn’t rather listen to themselves talk over that kind of thing? The other thing about sound in the desert is, it carries for absurdly long distances. We lived on the edge of town, a town so small it didn’t have a grocery store, and people would take their trucks out into the desert a couple miles off to set bonfires or hang out doing who knows what… I know what, because my window was open and I could hear them laughing and talking in the distance about people getting drunk at parties, who cheated on whom, and all the other things that small town people talk about when they think no one else can hear them… I guess they didn’t know how far sound carries for miles through flat desert terrain… Sounded like they were right in front of my house. Believe me, Roland would hear a lot of disturbing things out there on his own, and his own human voice was probably better than most of it. So what’s wrong with talking to himself when there’s no one else around? There’s nothing crazy or weird about that, it’s just human nature.
Now I’m done nit picking. From that point on my mind stopped stumbling over the little information snags. I’m onto the next book now and procrastinating because I don’t really want to know if he betrays Jake again or not. I’ve reread this story enough times to know it’s coming, but in the movie, he saved him, so why not again in the comic right? That’s probably too much to hope for. Every time it starts it’s a little different, doesn’t it? Maybe those small changes amount to larger changes overall. If we’re looking at it from a theoretical perspective maybe he’s the thread holding the tear together and maybe some of the information carries with him through each loop he treks. Maybe I’m too optimistic. I was going to give this three stars because I liked it but there were snags that kept catching at my mind, but then it landed strong and got my brain all in a frenzy. So now it’s four. Because that’s the kind of addicting aspect of the book that keeps your readers coming back for more. Well played and thank you for the stories.