Cell — Stephen King
Stephen King’s *Cell* is an apocalyptic thriller in which the author transforms an everyday gadget into a tool for the destruction of humanity. The book was written as a warning about society’s excessive dependence on technology.
The events unfold instantly and violently. In downtown Boston, a mysterious signal called “The Pulse” spreads through the cellular network. Anyone holding a phone to their ear at that moment instantly loses their mind and turns into an aggressive madman driven by primal instincts. Within hours, the world descends into chaos: plane crashes, mass murders, and the complete collapse of civilization.
The protagonist, comic book artist Clayton Riddell, is one of the few who wasn’t using a phone. He joins a small group of survivors to escape the burning city and find his son, hoping that he didn’t have time to answer the fateful call.
Key moments:
The evolution of the “mobile psychs”: Unlike typical zombies, the victims of “The Pulse” begin to evolve collectively. They acquire telepathic abilities and gather in packs that act as a single organism under the leadership of the mysterious “Man in the Red Jacket.”
Social Criticism: King satirizes how easily people can be turned into a controllable mob through the very things we can no longer imagine living without.
An Atmosphere of Despair: This is one of the author’s bleakest books, where hope for salvation fades with every mile the characters travel.
| Общие характеристики | |
|---|---|
| Author | Stephen King |
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