![]() ![]() The strongest connection seems to be simply an invitation into the full expanse of twisted wonderland that is his imagination. ![]() ![]() ![]() It’s a wildly ambitious idea, but because most of King’s stories take place in different (if similar) realities, few interact in ways that matter. “I am coming to understand that Roland’s world (or worlds) actually contains all the others of my making,” writes King in his afterword to Wizard and Glass. Roland’s (still vaguely defined) mission is to reach the Tower and halt the galactic collapse.īut while previous Dark Tower novels included cameos by non- Dark Tower characters (notably Randall Flagg, the big baddie in The Stand), Wizard and Glass is the first book in the series to meander its main storyline into that of a seemingly unrelated work. Wizard and Glass The Dark Tower by Stephen King Dave McKean Illustrator Roland of Gilead and his fellow pilgrims determine to reach the Dark Tower but their. Roland’s world is the core world, though, and in it resides the Tower, the lynchpin of the multiverse. Earlier books in the Dark Tower series laid out how the barriers between the parallel planes of King’s cosmos are eroding, causing elements of different existences to bleed into each other. Let’s start with the jaunt into an empty Kansas. ![]()
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