
It
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To the children, the town was their whole world. To the adults, knowing better, Derry, Maine, was just their hometown: familiar, well ordered for the most part. A good place to live. It was the children who saw - and felt - what made Derry so horribly different.
In the storm drains, in the sewers, IT lurked, taking on the shape of every nightmare, each one's deepest dread. Sometimes IT reached up, seizing, tearing, killing....
The adults, knowing better, knew nothing. Time passed, and the children grew up, moved away. The horror of IT was deep buried, wrapped in forgetfulness. Until they were called back, once more to confront IT as IT stirred and coiled in the sullen depths of their memories, reaching up again to make their past nightmares a terrible present reality.
- Listening Length44 hours and 53 minutes
- Audible release date20 September 2016
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB01H0INCW2
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
Listening Length | 44 hours and 53 minutes |
---|---|
Author | Stephen King |
Narrator | Steven Weber |
Whispersync for Voice | Ready |
Audible.com.au Release Date | 20 September 2016 |
Publisher | Hodder & Stoughton |
Program Type | Audiobook |
Version | Unabridged |
Language | English |
ASIN | B01H0INCW2 |
Best Sellers Rank | 682 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) 19 in Horror Fiction 49 in Horror (Books) 420 in Teen & Young Adult (Books) |
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Top reviews from Australia
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However the book far exceeded my expectations, this is an addictive story that really draws you into the world.
So if you have already seen the film before reading the book don't let that put you off.
Seeing the film first in no way diminishes the book.
Top reviews from other countries

This book is hard for me to review objectively because IT and I have history. (See what I just did there?). I've read it before you see, twice in fact. The first time, when I was young, closer in age to the kids in the book, I saw things from their perspective, and then, as I got older, I related to the adults more, and now, on my third visit, well, I just feel for them all.
This epic book runs to one thousand one hundred and sixty-six pages and has such depth, not just in the characters, but in the history of the town in which they live, that in spite of its length, it has pace, firing you out from one chapter to the next.
You read the first fifty pages and you're hooked, the next two hundred pass in a blur, of excitement, of reunion, of horror, and then, before you know it, you're half way through, but still, new things are happening. Like the shootout in front of the pharmacy in broad daylight, where half the town came armed and ready to kill. The explosion of 1906 that killed 88 kids on an Easter egg hunt. The great flood that washed half the town away decades before, and of course, the realisation that every twenty-seven years, kids go missing, die, left, right and centre, but with no one seeming to noticing, seeming to care. And why don't they notice, why don't they care?
IT . . . that's why.
IT has a hold over the town of Derry. People turn a blind eye, forget, dismiss, delude themselves that the missing and the dead left town, were trouble makers, fell out with their families, anything but admit the truth, but in the summer of '58', just as they break for summer vacation, seven kids become friends, become The Losers, and one of them, stuttering Bill, who lost his brother in the fall of '57', has a score to settle, a score that may well take him twenty-seven years to fulfil.
To label this book would be an injustice, to label it horror would be plain wrong, because it's a, coming of age, thriller, horror, murder mystery, sci-fi, history book, all rolled into one, and I bet you can’t say that very often, and the other thing, the worst thing about this book, (there always has to be a 'but' it seems), is that once you've raced through the first nine hundred or so pages and the end is nigh, you want it to slow down, because deep down you know, that when you turn that last page, read that last paragraph, you're gonna be left with a massive hole where those Losers where and the biggest book hangover you've ever had.
To give this book a star rating any less than six out of five would be a travesty, but as we're governed by convention I will have to settle for five.
If you haven't yet taken a journey to Derry, never been to the Barrens and met Henry Bowers, been in the thick of an apocalyptic rock fight, smelt the scorched remains of the Black Spot, been chased from 29 Neibolt street by a leper, a werewolf or Pennywise the dancing clown, you’ve never really lived.
Put simply, one of the greatest books I have ever read.


Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 15 October 2018
This book is hard for me to review objectively because IT and I have history. (See what I just did there?). I've read it before you see, twice in fact. The first time, when I was young, closer in age to the kids in the book, I saw things from their perspective, and then, as I got older, I related to the adults more, and now, on my third visit, well, I just feel for them all.
This epic book runs to one thousand one hundred and sixty-six pages and has such depth, not just in the characters, but in the history of the town in which they live, that in spite of its length, it has pace, firing you out from one chapter to the next.
You read the first fifty pages and you're hooked, the next two hundred pass in a blur, of excitement, of reunion, of horror, and then, before you know it, you're half way through, but still, new things are happening. Like the shootout in front of the pharmacy in broad daylight, where half the town came armed and ready to kill. The explosion of 1906 that killed 88 kids on an Easter egg hunt. The great flood that washed half the town away decades before, and of course, the realisation that every twenty-seven years, kids go missing, die, left, right and centre, but with no one seeming to noticing, seeming to care. And why don't they notice, why don't they care?
IT . . . that's why.
IT has a hold over the town of Derry. People turn a blind eye, forget, dismiss, delude themselves that the missing and the dead left town, were trouble makers, fell out with their families, anything but admit the truth, but in the summer of '58', just as they break for summer vacation, seven kids become friends, become The Losers, and one of them, stuttering Bill, who lost his brother in the fall of '57', has a score to settle, a score that may well take him twenty-seven years to fulfil.
To label this book would be an injustice, to label it horror would be plain wrong, because it's a, coming of age, thriller, horror, murder mystery, sci-fi, history book, all rolled into one, and I bet you can’t say that very often, and the other thing, the worst thing about this book, (there always has to be a 'but' it seems), is that once you've raced through the first nine hundred or so pages and the end is nigh, you want it to slow down, because deep down you know, that when you turn that last page, read that last paragraph, you're gonna be left with a massive hole where those Losers where and the biggest book hangover you've ever had.
To give this book a star rating any less than six out of five would be a travesty, but as we're governed by convention I will have to settle for five.
If you haven't yet taken a journey to Derry, never been to the Barrens and met Henry Bowers, been in the thick of an apocalyptic rock fight, smelt the scorched remains of the Black Spot, been chased from 29 Neibolt street by a leper, a werewolf or Pennywise the dancing clown, you’ve never really lived.
Put simply, one of the greatest books I have ever read.



I will admit I was completely taken aback by the SIZE of this... 1376 pages!!! I began this book back in September 2017 and read about 200 pages before I stopped for a while. I kept picking it up and stopping again over the next few months.
But over the last month I have just been constantly reading this and it enthralled me.
This story creeped me the hell out but I loved it.
I’m sad this story is over.
This is my favourite book by Stephen King.


Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 6 March 2018
I will admit I was completely taken aback by the SIZE of this... 1376 pages!!! I began this book back in September 2017 and read about 200 pages before I stopped for a while. I kept picking it up and stopping again over the next few months.
But over the last month I have just been constantly reading this and it enthralled me.
This story creeped me the hell out but I loved it.
I’m sad this story is over.
This is my favourite book by Stephen King.


Seven children battled It twenty seven years before and almost beat it. This monster wakes every twenty seven years and murder, dismember and feed on children. It has the ability to change its form, to become the things that individual children fear and likes to take the form of Pennywise the clown.
Then following a big event were It reaches its peak of activity, then the monster sleeps. This cycle has been repeating since before records began, but nobody likes to talk about it or write about it. It’s like all the citizens of Derry have willful blindness.
It tells the story of Bill (Big Bill), Eddie, Richie, Bev, Ben, Stan and Mike. Their battle with It as children and their return to Derry as adults to face It again.
As adults will they have the same magic that they had as children to beat It? And this time, will they be able to finish what they started twenty seven years ago?
This book is way too long. It has 1,166 pages and the reader will find themselves counting down the pages. The plot is simple, most of the book is character development, rather than storytelling. Whole sections of this book could be cut without any interfering with the plot and would still have give the reader a good sense of each individual character. The description was overly wordy at times.
There are some iconic horror scenes that will stay with the reader long after they have read the book. These scenes would lend themselves brilliantly to film, which is why it is no surprise that it was recently made into a film.
Overall what made It mildly enjoyable was getting to know the characters. The plot lacked any captivating moments, twists or turns. This story could easily have been told in a standard novel size, rather than this massive book. Inadequate editing and seemingly no harsh cutting let this book down.
It is available to buy on Amazon and at all good book shops.
Review soon,
Antony


My overwhelming thoughts as I exit the world of Derry, Maine, is what an incredibly well crafted story King wrote with It. The characters are so heavily developed, the town itself is described in minute deal, by the end of the 1300+ pages, you feel like you’ve been a resident of Derry for years. There were passages where It dragged, especially the ‘interludes’ that didn’t hugely add to the story, but for the most part, I have huge admiration for this novel.
The seven kids who form the losers, were all loveable and likeable, and you genuinely cared what happened to them. Ben, Bill and Bev were all special favourites of mine, with Eddie and Mike close behind too. Their backstories were all heartwarming and breaking all at once, with each of them having some element that made you want to scoop them up and protect them. Even as grownups, you are left wanting to protect the seven, their lives all taking at least some tragic path. I loved the split of the novel, with the seamless integration between the modern day and the past day, especially towards the end of the novel.
The villains in the story were all superb. Henry especially was just enough crazy that you were left feeling utterly terrified whenever he was near our heroes. His friends ranging from blind follower to bat shit crazy, also added an extra level of terror. Moving in to the adult world, Tom was so easy to hate, and again, was just the right level of crazy, keeping it slightly realistic. Of course the main villain of the story is It, the idea of a shape shifting creature that favours the face of a clown is terrifying enough, but it’s obvious and complete control of everything in Derry just sends shivers down your spine. Every incarnation of It we see is increasingly spookier, with the worst possibly being the hobo under the porch, and the crone in the flat.
Not everything is a positive here, although I stand firmly by the five stars I’ve given it. A particular bug bare of mine is Kings seeming fascination with child rape and sex. There are several points in the story where I cringed at the seriously detailed passages about various sex acts on the kids. And this is not the first King novel that’s left me feeling that way. The ‘orgy’ as my friend aptly refered to it, was the particular low point here, and made absolutely no sense or addition to the novel. I won’t ever understand the need to add that in.
All in all, this was a great read, and if you have a spare week or two, well worth it!