How Cujo by Stephen King Has Become Underrated Over Time And Why It's Still Great

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июл 2024
  • Mike continues his Into the Multiverse series by talking about the seventh published novel by Stephen King, 1981's Cujo.
    0:00 Introduction & Excerpt Reading
    2:09 Info & Background
    4:30 What Is It About?
    7:05 What Makes It Good Or Bad?
    12:40 Why You Should Read It
    15:40 Spoiler Thoughts & Multiverse Connections
    You can purchase Cujo here: amzn.to/39iRBRH (physical) amzn.to/2ZScEY2 (Kindle) amzn.to/2ZRuCKr (audio)
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Комментарии • 193

  • @mikesbookreviews
    @mikesbookreviews  4 года назад +16

    Hey bookworms and Constant Readers! I'm glad to finally be talking about Cujo because I'm tired of seeing it listed as a bottom-third Stephen King book. Where would you place it? Sound off below.

    • @paperbackstash7267
      @paperbackstash7267 4 года назад

      I don't have a specific order of favorites, but it would be in my top five.

    • @No1emilybrowningfan
      @No1emilybrowningfan 3 года назад

      This one is definitely in my top 10

    • @therubberman1997
      @therubberman1997 5 дней назад

      I’d put it in B tier. Better than expected. Not among his best but far from his worst

  • @GreeneZonee
    @GreeneZonee 4 года назад +53

    Stephen King and the way he treats kids in his books scares the hell out of me as a father lol pet sematary had me wanting to go hug my boys.

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  4 года назад +9

      Pet Sematary is without a doubt his scariest book if you have young children.

    • @eboniestevenson231
      @eboniestevenson231 3 года назад +4

      Exactly! In Stephen King's world anybody can get. Nobody is safe and it really plays on you when you become a parent reading his books.

    • @Shuxley
      @Shuxley 11 дней назад

      He’s a pedo, right?

  • @sammyingersoll8870
    @sammyingersoll8870 4 года назад +30

    This is my favorite King story. Its gritty, depressing, unpredictable. Deals with real life issues. I think the most least referenced part of the story is the environment. Just as The Shining makes you feel cold this one makes you sweat. Cujo is probably the most underrated character King has ever created

  • @brunofbneto
    @brunofbneto 4 года назад +48

    Cujo was such a good boy before the bite. I felt sad when he started getting mad. For me this book was one of the most terrifying ideas King has in the beginning of his career and I really liked it. Not on my top 3 King books though.

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  4 года назад +4

      Certainly not a top 3 for me, nor a top 10. But I think it’s so much better than it’s legacy.

    • @Saber0003
      @Saber0003 3 года назад +7

      What I like about Cujo is it's completely grounded in reality.
      Its a real situation that could have happened to anyone back then, which to me is always much scarier than ghosts or telekinesis or whatever

    • @omalleysmith9100
      @omalleysmith9100 3 года назад +3

      Cujo was still a good boy after having contracted rabies; he was just sick. The people in the book were so dumb and dysfunctional, I found myself cheering for Cujo all the way through it. To me he was a victim, not a villain.

    • @mariposa9506
      @mariposa9506 2 года назад

      @@omalleysmith9100 you were cheering him on to kill the lady and child?

    • @pablobratcat
      @pablobratcat Год назад

      Its a great analogy for mental illness.

  • @devinmccarthy7673
    @devinmccarthy7673 4 года назад +34

    Named my own dog after this book. Couldn’t be more the opposite of the Cujo

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  4 года назад +18

      Ha ha same. Except my wife wouldn’t let me name him Cujo.

    • @ThatTsundokuGirl
      @ThatTsundokuGirl 3 года назад

      I was thinking the same XD

    • @warrenh
      @warrenh Год назад +7

      Cujo was a good dog dude, but something happened to him that was out of his control. That's the entire point!

  • @warrenh
    @warrenh Год назад +4

    I read this book just a few months ago, and was deeply moved by it. To me, the overall message was that life is shitty and there are monsters we fear and face throughout: a monster in your closet, a failed marriage, a failed career, a sweet dog who is rabid(not feral dude). Regarding King being ripped, I think that made the book that much more raw and personal. A grand expression of deep depression. There was a scene where a random woman dies while hearing the little boy squealing with delight while playing on a swing....remember that? GUT PUNCH. Also, the final paragraph where it mentions the bunny that Cujo chased into the bat cave dying in slow, silent misery......that bunny is all of us -trapped in the cave called life. Ugh.

  • @daveedmunds1109
    @daveedmunds1109 3 года назад +7

    Got to agree with you. This is easily one of my favourite endings in a King book. A real shock to the system. Which is what horror books are for.

  • @nicholassims9837
    @nicholassims9837 3 года назад +11

    Fun Fact the St Bernard for both Cujo and Beethoven was the same dog.

  • @possessedbygenesis8585
    @possessedbygenesis8585 3 года назад +6

    I tell people all the time that Cujo is criminally underrated. I’ve read 20+ King books which include all the big ones and while others might be better, Cujo was without a doubt a favorite of mine. I found it to be incredibly suspenseful and gut wrenching. That ending stayed with me for a few days. I’m happy to hear someone echo my sentiments on the book.

  • @paperbackstash7267
    @paperbackstash7267 4 года назад +9

    I almost dreaded clicking on the video at first because I was worried you'd be in the popular camp of not appreciating this one like I do. I'm glad to see that's not the case.
    As you mentioned, not a perfect book, but I still rated it five stars when I read it as an adult. It's very underrated, as you said. I admit I sobbed at the end, as a mother of a young son at the time. The emotion in this book, and I'd always found rabies fascinating regardless. I grew up in the mountains in North Carolina before moving to Florida and remember a nonvacinated dog I grew up with ended up getting it.
    As for the movie, glad you also enjoyed it too and I agree it's one of his better screen adaptations. I think the director did a great job with somehow capturing the grimness, miserable mindset of Castle Rock without having to get flashy, you could almost sense it in the air before Cujo even turned vicous. I know a lot of fans were unhappy the movie changed the ending, but I think it fit the film version better. As for Dee Wallace Stone, she was always a top favorite screen queen of mine - her acting in this, the Howling, Critters, Halloween remake, among others, she's an excellent actress with grief, fear, and genuine emotion.
    Something you said resonated with me too on not enjoying it as much as a teenager. I watched the movie as a teen, did not read the book as an adult. I think most of us got bored with the story as a teen or child and that this is a story adults will appreciate more when it comes to the side plots that dominate the first half of the story. As an adult, it doesn't bore me at all with the strained marriage, pressure, parent/child bond, cheating --- as a teen, I think it tended to be boring in parts, but as an adult not at all.
    I hope they don't remake this one, don't see how they can actually improve on it.
    Oh, and I have to mention I love your introductions to these particular books with the artwork and reading passages. It was great with The Shining and Why You Should Read Michael Crichton as well.

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  4 года назад +1

      Thanks so much for the comment. A lot of his books have hit me differently reading as a parent vs reading as a teen. His books are timeless for that very reason.

  • @Rose_Macabre
    @Rose_Macabre 3 года назад +4

    I read Cujo when I was a teen, and really enjoyed it. It's a different kind of horror, and surprisingly emotional.

  • @explodingasstechnique8457
    @explodingasstechnique8457 3 года назад +4

    The book truly frightened me. Nothing about the dog scared me, it was the people in the book. All so rotten yet so real. And the ending was so sad. Binge read the whole book in two sittings and it left me feeling disturbed.

  • @newsfromthegelding
    @newsfromthegelding 4 года назад +3

    Really enjoying your review! So refreshing to have a reviewer who can talk eloquently and at length without cut edits after every sentence! Subscribing! Cheers!

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  4 года назад +1

      Thanks! I only use jump cuts when I sneeze or get interrupted by my kids.

  • @phillise1
    @phillise1 Год назад +1

    Cujo was the very first King book that I read. And when Tad died, I quit reading King for years. Until I gave the Dark Tower: The Wastelands a try.

  • @norahwinston9281
    @norahwinston9281 2 года назад

    Misery was the book that made me fall in love with reading in middle school. So glad I found your page. I’ve revisited King recently and reading some books I haven’t read yet including Cujo. Love your channel and you’re enthusiastic review of King works.

  • @littleaussierippa
    @littleaussierippa 2 года назад

    Hi Mike. I just discovered your channel and immediately subscribed. I've been a constant reader of Stephen King for 40 years and just finished reading Cujo for the third time. I first read it when I was 10, again at 16 or 17 and today at 48. I started re-reading his books in publication order about 6 months ago. Cujo was the first book of his that I read and it's one of my personal favourites. Definitely one of his most underrated books. Nice to see that you appreciate the movie as well.

  • @lindal7827
    @lindal7827 3 года назад

    Discovered your videos last week and they immediately made me want to pick up a King book.
    So I started Cujo on Friday. Finished it half an hour ago. Loved it. Might not be his very best but I was glued to the pages most of the weekend. I loved the ending. Now Im going to have to spend the rest of the evening nursing a book-hangover.

  • @No1emilybrowningfan
    @No1emilybrowningfan 3 года назад +4

    Loved this book. Loved the way some of the story was told from Cujo’s perspective.

  • @MizzFortune91
    @MizzFortune91 Месяц назад

    Got an instant like for the Sharp cereal qoute in the beginning very sharp 👌🏻

  • @roylandrum863
    @roylandrum863 4 года назад +9

    I checked this out from the Library when I was in 6th grade after seeing the movie... my mom found me reading it and took it away when I was about 75 pages in...

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  4 года назад +3

      Ha ha I had to hide King books from my mom growing up.

    • @AllenFreemanMediaGuru
      @AllenFreemanMediaGuru 3 года назад +2

      Ha! I thought for a second your mom took the book away when you were 75.

    • @No1emilybrowningfan
      @No1emilybrowningfan 3 года назад +1

      @@mikesbookreviews I was lucky. My mum was fine with me reading King. She told me she wasn’t too happy with me reading Misery and Gerald’s Game, but she didn’t stop me

  • @katrinabrown
    @katrinabrown 4 года назад +8

    Cujo is one of my favorites! I tell everyone to start with it, bc it's super long or insane lol. Side note: my little brother would name every pet he ever had Cujo, starting at the age of five. Every hamster, bunny, fish, etc. It was very bizarre.

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  4 года назад +4

      I wanted to name every dog my wife and I have owned together Cujo and she refused.

    • @courtneygrier2015
      @courtneygrier2015 Год назад

      @@mikesbookreviews my own St Bernard is called Cujo. Other dog with that name I met at Petsmart: tiny chihuahua.

  • @rociomiranda5684
    @rociomiranda5684 2 года назад +1

    Cujo is my favorite Stephen King book, and movie adaptation.

  • @Luke-cp2jz
    @Luke-cp2jz 4 года назад +4

    Been waiting for this one! Glad to see such a long video talking about it. When I read this book I was irritated on how it barely focused on Cujo, but all that irritation went away in the last 1/4 of the book. This book had me legit terrified of dogs for a few weeks, and I had multiple dreams of evil dogs and even myself getting bitten by bats, this book does everything so well, and the relationships within the book definitely need to be there, I couldn't imagine this book without forming the relationships first, because it helps the ending pay off so much better.
    *Spoilers ahead* The big ending and what really got me was that the Trenton's seemed to just be getting over or tolerating Donna's affair and Vic kept calling and cared about her and it seemed to be getting better, and right as it gets better you have this happening where Donna and Tad are in the car, and my heart will always break for Tad, that really made me cry. It was a gut wrenching moment when you see how hard Tad fought and how hard Donna fought for him all for the heat and exhaustion to kill him. That's the worst part of the book, and I stopped for minutes after reading his death and just sat there teary eyed. This book really is good.

  • @chrisconrod6265
    @chrisconrod6265 4 года назад +1

    Love that dog!

  • @iveybullard8988
    @iveybullard8988 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for the video Mike. I havent read a ton of King books yet but Cujo is one of my favorites. Its a must read for any king fan.

  • @lifeisatrip7817
    @lifeisatrip7817 2 года назад +1

    I loved this book just finished it I didn’t think I was gona like it since I had already seen the movie yet the last 100 hundred pages I couldn’t put it down it was so good I gave it 5 stars

  • @mumblingmorlock5445
    @mumblingmorlock5445 3 года назад +2

    Just discovered this channel, goes along very well with my Stephen King unhealthy mania.
    Great content, subbed!

  • @laguy8181
    @laguy8181 2 года назад

    Love the overlook hotel shirt

  • @robynprice717
    @robynprice717 4 года назад

    Hi Mike. I absolutely love your book reviews, especially the Stephen King ones. I haven't gotten around to reading Cujo yet, not actually sure why 🤷🏼‍♀️ It's looking at me now though, from the bookshelf, with disgust so I think it'll have to be next on my list.
    Also, I would kill for your book collection. Love seeing it in the background & could only wish that mine was so neat & ordered.
    Best wishes from across the pond. 💚

  • @emosongsandreadalongs
    @emosongsandreadalongs Год назад

    As soon as I finish reading a King book I love coming here to see what Mike had to say about it

  • @leowise206
    @leowise206 2 года назад

    I love the music of your introduction! It is so dark and so eerie (is that the right word?).
    I am reading Cujo right now for the first time, so far I think I enjoy this book more then the books Stephen King was aware of writing.

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  2 года назад

      Ha. That did seem to be when he couldn’t miss.

  • @daveedmunds1109
    @daveedmunds1109 3 года назад +1

    Fantastic! Someone who enjoys Cujo for what it is. A very realistic horror with an intense and brutal finish.

  • @FinalGirlHorror
    @FinalGirlHorror 3 года назад

    I love Cujo! It was the first SK book I ever read I was 8 (now 46), I watched the movie and my Mom told me it was book. After reading it I fell in love with King and started at Carrie and read everything in order.

  • @safinan8008
    @safinan8008 4 года назад +1

    Hello.. like ur book review.. 😊📖 happy reading to u!!

  • @BookZealots
    @BookZealots 4 года назад +1

    Thank you for also including the spoilers. My dad was a King junky when I was growing up. I saw the movies when I was way too young. The only book I've read of King was The Dark Half. But I have 11/22/63 and his most recent? I think, The Institute. I've heard the comment about King being a better writer before his accident. Thank you for your review.

  • @emosongsandreadalongs
    @emosongsandreadalongs Год назад +1

    When I was about ¾ of the way through I thought that . . .
    (Spoilers ahead)
    . . . Steve Kemp was going to discover Donna at the Camber's (since he saw the note she left while he was trashing her house). I thought he might go there to bother her, get himself killed, and then Donna and Tad could escape in his van. I still think that could've been a cooler ending.
    I never expected Tad to die. That one hurt

  • @alib6615
    @alib6615 7 месяцев назад

    Also, props to Dee Wallace - not only for being a screen icon, but she had to go to the hospital for exhaustion because filming "Cujo" was so taxing on her physically and mentally. She put her all into that movie. She explained in an interview that your body doesn't realize that you are going through these traumatic things for a movie and so it really affects you as an actor.

  • @wilkfiadh
    @wilkfiadh 2 года назад +1

    for me cujo is actually one of king's most terrifying works because rabies is...an actual thing, that can happen. yeah carrie, and it, and the shining, and pet sematary etc, but those are all fairly supernatural. rabies is something that you could experience in your life, and it's such a horrifying way for someone or an animal to go, and the book goes so in depth about the way that cujo's brain is being overcome by the virus.

  • @norahwinston9281
    @norahwinston9281 2 года назад +1

    I really liked Cujo. I never read it until recently. I didn’t find it as hard to put down as most others but that was only because of how long a few of the parts about the Sharps account was. I realized I stopped during those parts much easier than any other parts of the story line. I was invested in Brett’s life even with the extended family, Donna’s drama, even what Joe and Gary were doing and couldn’t put it down at those parts. Overall really enjoyed it.

  • @Vangone-bu6vu
    @Vangone-bu6vu 4 года назад +1

    Here to support the King videos. Haven’t gotten around to Cujo yet.

  • @locolima279
    @locolima279 4 года назад +2

    Good vid, Mike. Saw the movie when I was a kid. Never read the book. The way you describe it kinda reminds me of Jaws by Peter Benchly where there is a lot more drama going on than the movie.

  • @Driak22
    @Driak22 Год назад

    Just ordered and it’s gonna be my first Stephen King Book

  • @alexthiebaut2195
    @alexthiebaut2195 2 года назад +2

    I read it last week as part of my Castle Rock run. Wasn't expecting much, but I liked it. I think the adultery woman explaining why she cheated on her husband is one of the best thing I ever read, all writers included.

  • @omalleysmith9100
    @omalleysmith9100 3 года назад +1

    Cujo is one of my very favourite King books of all time. The fact that he was not sober while writing it just makes it even MORE amazing to me, that wasn't a deterrent. :D

  • @pabloteutla1703
    @pabloteutla1703 10 месяцев назад

    Beautiful intro

  • @johnnyklebitzrevenge4793
    @johnnyklebitzrevenge4793 Год назад

    Gordie actually makes direct reference to Cujo, saying he was a successor to Chopper to kids of Castle Rock

  • @AllenFreemanMediaGuru
    @AllenFreemanMediaGuru 3 года назад +1

    I liked all the subplots. It all added to the book for me.

  • @keep_calmandcarry_yarn5912
    @keep_calmandcarry_yarn5912 2 года назад +1

    Oh my I loved this book ☺ officially have a book hangover as I don't know which SK to read next 🤪

  • @jeffgerdau9436
    @jeffgerdau9436 2 года назад

    I read this in 2014. It was awesome, one of my favorites

  • @CaatsGoMoooo
    @CaatsGoMoooo 3 года назад +1

    Just finished the novel a few hours ago and hoo boy... That was tense as all hell. I was surprised to find out that it was one of King's more polarizing/disliked novels, as I felt it was VERY good. Only criticism I have is that it could have worked with a little bit of the bloat cut out, maybe 50 pages or so. Other than that, I thought it was extremely gripping. I knew the big spoiler in the end before I went in, but even still, it hit me like a train, and I found myself tearing up pretty badly LOL. I've only read about 15 of his novels so far, and I'd say this would be mid-tier, though for context I haven't read a King novel that I've disliked yet! Also as a side note, I personally find Lisey's Story to be the most underrated King novel, simply because it's tied with IT as my favourite novel of his, but is also one of my favourite novels of all time. I love the blend of romance with horror, wish he would write more of it! I hope you enjoy it when you eventually reach it!

  • @shamrockballs1066
    @shamrockballs1066 2 года назад

    Really nice review. Considering picking up Cujo

  • @matthewbrown1151
    @matthewbrown1151 4 года назад +4

    I'm extremely jealous of your first edition hardcovers.

  • @robertholmes7467
    @robertholmes7467 4 года назад +3

    Finally some love for the Cujo movie. Stephen King film adaptations can be very hit'n'miss but I believe that was one of the better ones.
    Stephen King should be read before seen....

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  4 года назад +1

      No idea why that movie gets the shit it does. It’s mostly faithful, uses a real dog, and doesn’t wimp out on most of the violence.

    • @robynprice717
      @robynprice717 4 года назад +2

      It really annoys me when people talk about 'The Shining' (positively none the least) & then tell me they haven't read it. I don't know why it bugs me so much, I just feel the book is so, so much better. The best Stephen King adaptation I've seen is Green Mile, in my opinion. Love the new IT series though, & was pleasantly surprised by Doctor Sleep. It's made me want to read the book again, as I was disappointed by the book thinking it would be more 'supernatural' ghosts & ghoulies type thing, more like The Shining than it was.

  • @xXRawrsXx26
    @xXRawrsXx26 2 года назад +1

    Cujo was the first Stephen King book I ever read as a child, he's my go to author when I want a spooky book. I'm currently reading Tommyknockers haha

  • @YechezkelBitter
    @YechezkelBitter 5 месяцев назад

    Crazy book. Half way through and it’s freakin amazing

  • @tyelerhiggins300
    @tyelerhiggins300 Год назад

    This book was _so_ good. I'm only about halfway through King's books so far, but this is up with the shining as his scariest books.

  • @isaacpunch9295
    @isaacpunch9295 7 месяцев назад

    I had heard average at best reactions to this story and I found myself loving it. The simplicity and the desperation of such an upsetting story had me blowing through at a record pace

  • @johnfouad4602
    @johnfouad4602 3 года назад

    I'm glad you posted this review. I went into Cujo thinking it was going to be a mediocre book, but I was pleasantly surprised by how brutal it is. Horror aside, the human element in it was too relatable for me.

  • @isaiahromero9861
    @isaiahromero9861 Год назад

    Im not a big reader, my severe adhd makes it so that i just cant handle books most of the time. But i went through a stephen king phase in highschool and this book, along with pet semetary, have stuck with me ever since and changed the way i saw the horror genre. Those 2 books are genuinely the most tragic stories i think i know of, besides a certain episode of breaking bad

  • @Michael_L_Morrison
    @Michael_L_Morrison 4 года назад +1

    Cujo was one I read as a teenage, and I remember liking it. I just haven't had a desire to revisit the story. I still remember a lot of it. And if I may quote Dudley Dursley of all people concerning this book, "I don't think it's a waste of space," but rather a very solid King story, and I recommend it.

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  4 года назад +1

      Yeah that’s fair. I was actually dreading it on my re-read and then liked it way more as an adult with kids.

  • @IamROSO
    @IamROSO 4 года назад +2

    I think ending is perfect it's dark and as father of two little girls it was hard and real, I loved it.

  • @seanphillips7923
    @seanphillips7923 2 года назад

    I read Cujo when I was around 15 also. I didn't read anything by king for years afterward. Cujo was my first by King

  • @d_johhns0n
    @d_johhns0n 3 года назад

    cujo is the first stephen king book i read, and i think it’s incredible. right now i’m reading carrie but i want to get more. i’m only 13 so like i couldn’t tell he was high when he wrote it-

  • @ThePowerHoster
    @ThePowerHoster 4 года назад +1

    Hey! I really love your shirt :)

  • @courtneygrier2015
    @courtneygrier2015 Год назад +1

    My favorite genre is fantasy but every once in awhile I'll delve into horror territory.
    This time I chose to read Cujo again and was not any less disturbed than the first time. The book was absolutely metal.
    The thing that scares me the most is that rabies is real and the book's portrayal of it is fairly accurate. Just the fact that viruses like this exist has spurred whole-ass philosophical conversations with myself about life, purpose, religion etc.

  • @FatCandyProduction
    @FatCandyProduction 3 года назад

    Just finished Cujo and I really liked it. The story seems quite stereotypical, but the way he preformed this is amazing.

  • @mikewiza1509
    @mikewiza1509 3 года назад

    New to your channel, was just wondering if that's a Gunslinger collectible and if so where did you get it?

  • @bellezabelleza9905
    @bellezabelleza9905 11 месяцев назад

    when i read this book at the point where tad dreamt about a lake and ducks and stuff and he and his mom was okay and safe and in his dream it was mentioned that tad went with the ducks.... now i think this is where tad initially died and the donna was hallucinating all this time which make things even more depressing which is good...(IDK IM MIGHT BE THE ONLY ONE THINKING ABOUT THIS BUT DAMN...)

  • @mikecampbell1731
    @mikecampbell1731 Месяц назад

    I like the looping ending of the dark tower. For me the biggest letdown is "It"....god damn giant spider lol

  • @J.R.Carrel
    @J.R.Carrel 2 года назад +1

    You should have warned me about the end Mike I just finished!

  • @user-lq8if8wd4d
    @user-lq8if8wd4d 10 месяцев назад

    Nice coffee mug

  • @niknak8299
    @niknak8299 3 года назад +2

    I just finished reading this yesterday and I thought It was a great read. Sure some of the side stories were unnecessary like Charity’s trip and to me some of Vic’s trip was just unnecessary, but overall great.
    It did have me on edge at points especially with Bannerman finding the pinto I really thought It was over and then bam he’s dead. And the whole Tad thing caught me by surprise I really thought he was gonna make it and they would have a happy ending but no I even had to reread the page because I couldn’t believe he had died. I thought Donna was hallucinating or something like that.

  • @georgeclark8382
    @georgeclark8382 5 месяцев назад +1

    I liked cujo it was the first king novel I read

  • @QueenCityHistory
    @QueenCityHistory Год назад

    Watching your videos has thrown me into the world of Stephen King. I read Misery, currently reading Dolores Claiborne and next is Christine, then Cujo, then Pet Sematary. I still have to find the guts to read IT...cause I hate clowns lol

  • @donaldbird6239
    @donaldbird6239 3 дня назад

    I loved cujo, the book and the movie!

  • @ceinwenchandler4716
    @ceinwenchandler4716 9 месяцев назад

    8:30 Haha. No. I read Pet Sematary and Misery, and neither one scared me. (At least not while I was reading it. That said, when I was alone in bed in the middle of the night, and the shadows in my room could have been anything... I'll admit both books did terrify me at 3 AM the next morning.) The main thing I got out of Pet Sematary was a lot of tears and dread. The suspense was beautifully built, and after a while, I started just bursting out in tears every time Gage's name came up.

  • @michaeldemetriou97
    @michaeldemetriou97 4 года назад +1

    I like your shit man. Great reviews

  • @RecordedMercury
    @RecordedMercury 3 года назад +2

    I feel like the statement "he was on drugs so it's bad" is so counterproductive. Hunter S Thompson is one of this generations greatest writers and he was constantly under the influence

  • @AllenFreemanMediaGuru
    @AllenFreemanMediaGuru 3 года назад

    Read the book this week and just watched the movie. The book is great. The movie held back on a few things, and changed the ending a bit. Softened it.

  • @kawaiikitty4569
    @kawaiikitty4569 3 месяца назад

    Cujo and Kojak are the pop culture references for doggies, bad boy and good boy.

  • @SunGawdRa
    @SunGawdRa 4 года назад

    I've just seen the movie, but Cujo was awesome! I didn't know people didn't like it...

  • @TheGlssr60
    @TheGlssr60 8 месяцев назад

    I read this book when it came out decades ago. Saw the movie and pretty much forgot about it. I'm currently listening to Stephen King novels chronologically on my phone and I'm up to "Cujo". I'm up to the part where Donna Trenton is explaining to her husband why she cheated. Biggest load of crap I've ever heard. Any husband with an ounce of self respect wouldn't listen to that garbage. And you know why? Because if HE had cheated and started spouting that s*** she never would have accepted it. Vic: "Oh honey, I felt old and that woman who was almost ten years older than me found me attractive and our kid was going to school and my mom had knick-knacks and, well, that should be enough to justify being me being a faithless spouse." Donna: "Yeah, I understand." Never in a million years.

  • @domagojradnic5837
    @domagojradnic5837 4 года назад +2

    " I love that book,that's a nasty mud " chief Jim Hooper xD

  • @alib6615
    @alib6615 7 месяцев назад

    Ummm...not scary!?! This was a first time read for me (finished in three days) and my first night reading it I had to stop because Tad's closet monster really freaked me out. I am a 43 year old adult who WILL NOT SLEEP WITH MY CLOSET DOOR OPEN. That's a no. I started reading after I got into bed for the night and then I had trouble falling asleep because I was waiting to hear my closet door opening. Also, for me, I thought the ending was a good one. It was realistic and gritty and made me have all kinds of feelings. I also liked that you got sections of the book from Cujo's perspective. I really enjoyed that. I also felt like I read this book faster because SK decided not to break this book up into chapters or sections. It just starts and goes until the final page. So, not only was I wanting to know what was going to happen, and how certain things culminated, it was also hard to find a stopping point. Just interesting way to structure a novel. He does the same for Delores Claiborne (which I read about 10 years ago). Again, interesting structure for storytelling. I feel like SK likes to mix things up structure-wise and always found that interesting.

  • @JaimeEnFuego
    @JaimeEnFuego 4 года назад +1

    I have MAJOR mixed feelings about all of the proverbial fluff that you mentioned. The iconic setup & scenario are what make this novel unique, especially the further world building of Castle Rock, but beyond that this one just feels slightly lackluster aside from the terrific literary word flow that King was somehow still able to conjure without the typical cognizance. Almost like a muscle memory thing is the best thing I could correspond it to. And while a weaker entry for me in what is considered by many his best decade of creativity there's no denying how iconic Beethoven...er...I mean CUJO...sorry, actually is in the minds of casual popular culture. With good reason as well since no one else had ever done a story quite like this one before, whereas so much King stuff, ie SALEM'S LOT, was him riffing and putting his own spin on priorly told stories. Pleasure watching as always Dude! Long days and pleasant nights.

  • @acueto7
    @acueto7 4 года назад +7

    I kinda feel like his early books were the best.

    • @brunofbneto
      @brunofbneto 4 года назад +1

      I think they were his most evil ideas.

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  4 года назад +2

      It’s like all those rock bands from the 70’s; when they were on drugs their content was amazing.

  • @G-Loud
    @G-Loud 5 месяцев назад

    Great review one correction tho the dog was around 190-200 lbs

  • @AAAAAAAAAA225
    @AAAAAAAAAA225 4 года назад

    and also mike when are ya gonna release your frightfest tbr?

  • @benjaminkennedy5083
    @benjaminkennedy5083 4 года назад +1

    That intro was really cool. As for the book I love and hate it. The book does have some of his best suspenseful moments, the scenes with Cujo are gold and I liked the ending (even though I prefer the movie version’s ending). However the subplots feel very unnecessary especially anything with the family who owned Cujo. But I do like this book a lot, there’s just some parts I wish he would’ve gotten rid of

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  4 года назад

      I’ll agree the stuff with the Camber family was pointless.

  • @Oneye839
    @Oneye839 2 года назад

    How many Stevan king book you read

  • @AJPzaworld
    @AJPzaworld 4 года назад +1

    One of the two books that made me hate Stephen King for a good 7 (maybe 9?) years. Can’t wait to hear your thoughts, Mike!
    Only real parts of this book that I liked were Cujo’s POV’s, mainly because I find it to be an interesting thing to read about compared to everything else.

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  4 года назад +1

      Don't be mad about Cujo. He was just taking care of his BOY.

  • @UncleRabbit1
    @UncleRabbit1 Год назад +1

    A lot of people don't realize this but Cujo is a retelling of The Shining; it's The Shining by Stephen King repackaged.

    • @dustinneely
      @dustinneely 20 дней назад

      Yep...I felt the same way. SK recycling his material.

  • @Fakespy
    @Fakespy 2 года назад

    I really enjoy your stuff. Thanks for keeping politics out of your videos. It’s so refreshing!

  • @mattmitchell8954
    @mattmitchell8954 Год назад

    I read every Stephen King book that came out between 1974-1986, and this is easily the darkest one from that time period.

  • @CaioH.
    @CaioH. 2 года назад +1

    The film is great, but the book is even better. The fact that we see Cujo's perspective (then being the protagonist villain) is something that worked very well. It is a psychological terror and a criticism of owners who do not vaccinate their animals, as this type of situation can occur. And Stephen King was an alcoholic at the time he wrote the book. It's as if Cujo is the *"personification of his addiction"* in the form of a dog. Good video.

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  2 года назад +1

      Very much better than the movie. Especially the ending.

  • @danecobain
    @danecobain 4 года назад +2

    I enjoyed Kujo. It's not a top ten King for me but it's not bad at all either!

  • @LifeInPink999
    @LifeInPink999 10 месяцев назад +1

    It’s one of the few Stephen King’s books I didn’t read yet. I actually have it, but every time I decide to read it I think “maybe I should read something else, this other book seems more interesting, etc.” because all I know I just know it’s about a dog and I don’t believe that an evil/ possessed/ afflicted by rabies dog as the main antagonist can unsettle me. So I decided to watch this video hoping it will convince me otherwise because I hate to have this book from one of my favorite authors yet finding excuses not to read it.

  • @madmonk4999
    @madmonk4999 4 года назад +1

    Personal question: Do you game at all? I find it hard to balance gaming and reading, I either do one or the other for stretches at a time. Any tips?

    • @mikesbookreviews
      @mikesbookreviews  4 года назад +2

      Certainly. I just don't watch nearly as much TV as I used to. Of the 3 forms of media entertainment (reading, watching TV, gaming), I've found I can only do 2 at a time. Obviously, reading isn't going to stop. So if I'm really into a TV series, I don't game. If a new game is coming out I want to play, I can't be bothered to watch TV. That's how I balance it.

    • @bdre5555
      @bdre5555 3 года назад

      I was very much into reading when I was younger, I read four or five Stephen King books back then. I now only have been doing gaming and TV for as long as I can remember. Sort of trying to break out of that and get back into reading, but I'm finding it very difficult to do

  • @slowlyred2082
    @slowlyred2082 4 года назад

    Haven't read it.. but the movie scared the crap outta me as a kid

  • @mathieuleader8601
    @mathieuleader8601 4 года назад

    nice IT Mug