Wolves of the Calla
(Libby/OverDrive eAudiobook)

Book Cover
Average Rating
Contributors
Series
Dark Tower volume 5
Published
Simon & Schuster Audio , 2003.
Status
Checked Out

Available Platforms

Libby/OverDrive
Titles may be read via Libby/OverDrive. Libby/OverDrive is a free app that allows users to borrow and read digital media from their local library, including ebooks, audiobooks, and magazines. Users can access Libby/OverDrive through the Libby/OverDrive app or online. The app is available for Android and iOS devices.

Description

Roland Deschain and his ka-tet are bearing southeast through the forests of Mid-World, the almost timeless landscape that seems to stretch from the wreckage of civility that defined Roland's youth to the crimson chaos that seems the future's only promise. Readers of Stephen King's epic series know Roland well, or as well as this enigmatic hero can be known. They also know the companions who have been drawn to his quest for the Dark Tower: Eddie Dean and his wife, Susannah; Jake Chambers, the boy who has come twice through the doorway of death into Roland's world; and Oy, the Billy-Bumbler.In this long-awaited fifth novel in the saga, their path takes them to the outskirts of Calla Bryn Sturgis, a tranquil valley community of farmers and ranchers on Mid-World's borderlands. Beyond the town, the rocky ground rises toward the hulking darkness of Thunderclap, the source of a terrible affliction that is slowly stealing the community's soul. One of the town's residents is Pere Callahan, a ruined priest who, like Susannah, Eddie, and Jake, passed through one of the portals that lead both into and out of Roland's world.As Father Callahan tells the ka-tet the astonishing story of what happened following his shamed departure from Maine in 1977, his connection to the Dark Tower becomes clear, as does the danger facing a single red rose in a vacant lot off Second Avenue in midtown Manhattan. For Calla Bryn Sturgis, danger gathers in the east like a storm cloud. The Wolves of Thunderclap and their unspeakable depredation are coming. To resist them is to risk all, but these are odds the gunslingers are used to, and they can give the Calla-folken both courage and cunning. Their guns, however, will not be enough.

More Details

Format
eAudiobook
Edition
Unabridged
Street Date
11/04/2003
Language
English
ISBN
9780743561693

Discover More

Also in this Series

  • The gunslinger (Dark Tower Volume 1) Cover
  • The drawing of the three (Dark Tower Volume 2) Cover
  • The waste lands (Dark Tower Volume 3) Cover
  • Wizard and glass (Dark Tower Volume 4) Cover
  • Wolves of the Calla (Dark Tower Volume 5) Cover
  • Song of Susannah (Dark Tower Volume 6) Cover
  • The dark tower: The dark tower VII (Dark Tower Volume 7) Cover
  • The wind through the keyhole (Dark Tower Volume ) Cover

Excerpt

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Similar Series From Novelist

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for series you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Readers looking for revenge stories with intriguing male protagonists at the helm will enjoy these suspenseful dark fantasy series. Both feature fearless and remarkable warriors on a high-stakes quest to save their realms from otherworldly menaces. -- Andrienne Cruz
Though Monstress is a graphic novel and Dark Tower is written in prose, both of these violent dark fantasy series feature elaborate world-building and complex protagonists who fight a variety of terrifying foes. -- Stephen Ashley
These books are not your average Westerns, thanks to elements of science fiction and fantasy and sophisticated world-building. Conflict reaches otherworldly heights in both series, as rugged characters hop through other dimensions (Dark Tower) and blitz through space (Factus Sequence). -- Basia Wilson
Skilled gunslingers tangle with magical villains in these suspenseful and bleak fantasy series with weird western vibes and gritty world-building. -- Andrienne Cruz
These series have the appeal factors bleak, violent, and world-building, and they have the theme "dark lord"; the genre "epic fantasy"; the subjects "parallel universes," "interdimensional travel," and "villains"; and characters that are "complex characters" and "flawed characters."
These series have the appeal factors world-building, and they have the genre "dark fantasy"; and the subjects "supernatural," "good and evil," and "quests."
These series have the appeal factors world-building, atmospheric, and intricately plotted, and they have the genre "epic fantasy"; the subjects "supernatural," "good and evil," and "quests"; and characters that are "complex characters," "flawed characters," and "well-developed characters."
These series have the appeal factors menacing, violent, and world-building, and they have the genres "fantasy fiction" and "dark fantasy"; and the subjects "supernatural," "magic," and "good and evil."
These series have the appeal factors violent and gritty, and they have the theme "vengeance is mine"; the genre "dark fantasy"; and the subjects "supernatural," "good and evil," and "revenge."

Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
The city stained red - Sykes, Sam
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NoveList recommends "Monstress" for fans of "Dark tower". Check out the first book in the series.
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These books have the appeal factors evocative, world-building, and atmospheric, and they have the genres "fantasy fiction" and "dark fantasy"; the subjects "supernatural," "black magic," and "wizards"; and characters that are "complex characters."
NoveList recommends "Gunnie Rose novels" for fans of "Dark tower". Check out the first book in the series.
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NoveList recommends "Kagen the damned" for fans of "Dark tower". Check out the first book in the series.

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Richard Bachman is the pseudonym of Steven King, generally associated with a more gruesome narrative voice. -- Jessica Zellers
Stephen King's and Dean R. Koontz's names are frequently linked as they both write in multiple, often blended genres. Like King, Koontz's stories feature a cast of personable characters involved in fast-paced, deadly battles between good and evil. Koontz, too, writes in a variety of genres, including horror, fantasy, and psychological suspense. -- Krista Biggs
Like father, like son. Both King and Hill blend genres, writing mostly horror that often incorporates suspense and dark fantasy tropes. Both tend to feature story lines with flawed but likable protagonists who confront their dark sides as they battle an evil supernatural being. -- Becky Spratford
The compelling, descriptive prose of these authors can be disturbing, creepy, menacing, and suspenseful. Their intricately plotted tales are violent (even gruesome) and center on well-developed protagonists caught by horrifying circumstances in atmospheric American settings. Besides thrilling, they reveal thought-provoking insight into human values and follies, hopes and fears. -- Matthew Ransom
Both these novelists employ vivid description, careful development of characters, initially believable scenarios that build into horrific experiences, and deft portrayal of the details of each shocking situation. While there is bleak and bloody mayhem in their tales, psychological suspense also plays a significant role in the reader's engagement. -- Katherine Johnson
These masters of horror, both articularly adept at creating well-drawn younger characters and generating a genuine atmosphere of menace and incipient violence, work at the intersection of death and dark humor in their often nostalgia-tinged tales of supernatural possession liberally punctuated with pop cultural references. -- Mike Nilsson
Readers who appreciate Stephen King's snappy dialogue, small-town settings, and tendency to portray childhood as a very dangerous time will savor the work of Dathan Auerbach, a King acolyte who got his start writing short-form horror on the Creepypasta website. -- Autumn Winters
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Stephen King and Andrew Pyper are versatile writers who have fully explored all corners of the horror genre. Ghosts, demons, the occult, and creepy monsters (both real-life and supernatural) -- you'll find them all scattered throughout Pyper and King's suspenseful novels. -- Catherine Coles
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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Wizard and Glass (1997), volume 4 ofing's massive, postapocalyptic, chivalrized western, The Dark Tower, was rather a snooze, not for lack of action but because it was primarily a flashback that drew unmercifully oning's stash of horse-opera cliches. 'S'all very nice, one thought, but let's move it, Steve! Volume 5--this book--moves it, despite not getting Roland the Gunslinger much nearer the Dark Tower, taking another big backward glance, and continuing to mine an open pit of oater conceits. Roland's ka-tet--himself and three twentieth-century New Yorkers, all of them now fellow gunslingers--approach a ranching and farming community anticipating a recurrent pestilence. After 23 years, the Wolves are coming from the evil-darkened East to abduct one of every pair of prepubescent twins older than three. The children will be returned, but nearly witless and sterile, doomed to grow immensely and enormously painfully in their middle teens, serve (if not too stupid) as workhorses, and suddenly, painfully wither and die in their early thirties. An erstwhile priest in the community knows what Roland and company are, and he persuades a community to send a committee to ask for their help. Of course, once asked, the code of the gunslinger compels acceptance. Gonna be a humdinger of a fight! Fore and aft of the showdown,ing stuffs the book with juice, like the big flashback, in which Pere Callahan reveals his past in . . . \lquote Salem's Lot. One of the greatest cavalcades in popular fiction is back on track. --Ray Olson Copyright 2003 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

"Time is a face on the water," stretching and contorting reality as gunslingers Roland, Eddie, Susannah, Jake and their talking pet "billy-bumbler" Oy continue their quest to prevent the destruction of the Dark Tower and, consequently, save all worlds from Chaos and the Crimson King's evil, red-eyed glare. Roland-the primary hero of King's epic tale, the first volume of which appeared in 1982-and company momentarily fall off the "Path of The Beam" to help the residents of Calla Bryn Sturgis, a farm town. But as Dark Tower fans know, everything follows The Beam, so what looks like a detour may really serve the will of "ka" (destiny). Roland and his posse learn that every 20-odd years the "Wolves" kidnap one child from each set of the Calla's twins, bring them to the Tower and, weeks later, send them back mentally and physically impaired. Meanwhile, back in 1977 New York City (the alternate world of Roland's surrogate son, Jake), bookstore owner Calvin Tower is being threatened by a group of thugs (readers will recognize them from The Drawing of the Three, 1987) to sell them a vacant lot in midtown Manhattan. In the lot stands a rose, or rather the Rose, which is our world's manifestation of the Dark Tower. With the help of the Old Fella (also known to `Salem's Lot readers as Father Callahan), the gunslingers must devise a plan against evil in both worlds. The task, however, is further complicated as Roland and his gang start noticing behavioral changes in wheelchair-bound, recovered schizophrenic Susannah. As the players near the Tower, readers will keep finding exciting ties between the Dark Tower universe and King's other books, with links to Black House, Insomnia, The Eyes of the Dragon, The Stand, `Salem's Lot and Hearts in Atlantis. The high suspense and extensive character development here (especially concerning Jake's coming-of-age), plus the enormity of King's ever-expanding universe, will surely keep his "Constant Readers" in awe. (Nov. 4) Forecast: This fifth installment of the series (after 1998's Wizard and Glass) precedes two more novels about the Dark Tower, reported to be King's last published works before retirement-so expect massive publicity and sky-high sales. Viking has just published a revised edition of the Dark Tower series' first book, The Gunslinger, which could attract new fans to the series, and Scribner recently released Stephen King's The Dark Tower: A Concordance, Volume I, by Robin Furth, to give series readers a thorough refresher course of who's who in books I-IV. (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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Library Journal Review

Roland, who keeps trying to reach the Dark Tower, is waylaid in the town of Calla Bryn Sturgis. With 12 full-color illustrations. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Booklist Reviews

/*Starred Review*/ Wizard and Glass (1997), volume 4 of King's massive, postapocalyptic, chivalrized western, The Dark Tower, was rather a snooze, not for lack of action but because it was primarily a flashback that drew unmercifully on King's stash of horse-opera cliches. "'S'all very nice," one thought, "but let's move it, Steve!" Volume 5--this book--moves it, despite not getting Roland the Gunslinger much nearer the Dark Tower, taking another big backward glance, and continuing to mine an open pit of oater conceits. Roland's ka-tet--himself and three twentieth-century New Yorkers, all of them now fellow gunslingers--approach a ranching and farming community anticipating a recurrent pestilence. After 23 years, the Wolves are coming from the evil-darkened East to abduct one of every pair of prepubescent twins older than three. The children will be returned, but nearly witless and sterile, doomed to grow immensely and enormously painfully in their middle teens, serve (if not too stupid) as workhorses, and suddenly, painfully wither and die in their early thirties. An erstwhile priest in the community knows what Roland and company are, and he persuades a community to send a committee to ask for their help. Of course, once asked, the code of the gunslinger compels acceptance. Gonna be a humdinger of a fight! Fore and aft of the showdown, King stuffs the book with juice, like the big flashback, in which Pere Callahan reveals his past in . . . 'Salem's Lot. One of the greatest cavalcades in popular fiction is back on track. ((Reviewed September 1, 2003)) Copyright 2003 Booklist Reviews

Copyright 2003 Booklist Reviews
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Library Journal Reviews

Roland, who keeps trying to reach the Dark Tower, is waylaid in the town of Calla Bryn Sturgis. With 12 full-color illustrations. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
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Library Journal Reviews

This is the fifth installment of King's epic series, started more than 30 years ago. In the last segment of the series, we left our hero, Roland, and his "ka-tet" of companions as they emerged from the Oz-like crystal palace to return to their quest for the Dark Tower (Wizard and Glass). Since then, much water has passed under the bridge in the lives of both the storyteller and his audience. Nonetheless, we have all gathered 'round the campfire once more to learn Roland's fate, and King does not fail us. In the latest portion of this epic tale, the four gunslingers take a detour from their journey to fight on behalf of the downtrodden residents of Calla Bryn Sturgis. Fans will delight not only in King's continued gleeful intertwining of multiple genres but perhaps most of all in the return of Salem's Lot's Father Callahan. This hardcover release, promising illustrations (not seen) by graphic artist Bernie Wrightson, is an essential addition to any library's King collection. It will be followed in close succession by the final two volumes of the series, both of which are completed and scheduled for publication in 2004. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 7/03.]-Nancy McNicol, Louise A. Brundage Community Lib., Hamden, CT Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

"Time is a face on the water," stretching and contorting reality as gunslingers Roland, Eddie, Susannah, Jake and their talking pet "billy-bumbler" Oy continue their quest to prevent the destruction of the Dark Tower and, consequently, save all worlds from Chaos and the Crimson King's evil, red-eyed glare. Roland-the primary hero of King's epic tale, the first volume of which appeared in 1982-and company momentarily fall off the "Path of The Beam" to help the residents of Calla Bryn Sturgis, a farm town. But as Dark Tower fans know, everything follows The Beam, so what looks like a detour may really serve the will of "ka" (destiny). Roland and his posse learn that every 20-odd years the "Wolves" kidnap one child from each set of the Calla's twins, bring them to the Tower and, weeks later, send them back mentally and physically impaired. Meanwhile, back in 1977 New York City (the alternate world of Roland's surrogate son, Jake), bookstore owner Calvin Tower is being threatened by a group of thugs (readers will recognize them from The Drawing of the Three, 1987) to sell them a vacant lot in midtown Manhattan. In the lot stands a rose, or rather the Rose, which is our world's manifestation of the Dark Tower. With the help of the Old Fella (also known to `Salem's Lot readers as Father Callahan), the gunslingers must devise a plan against evil in both worlds. The task, however, is further complicated as Roland and his gang start noticing behavioral changes in wheelchair-bound, recovered schizophrenic Susannah. As the players near the Tower, readers will keep finding exciting ties between the Dark Tower universe and King's other books, with links to Black House, Insomnia, The Eyes of the Dragon, The Stand, `Salem's Lot and Hearts in Atlantis. The high suspense and extensive character development here (especially concerning Jake's coming-of-age), plus the enormity of King's ever-expanding universe, will surely keep his "Constant Readers" in awe. (Nov. 4) Forecast: This fifth installment of the series (after 1998's Wizard and Glass) precedes two more novels about the Dark Tower, reported to be King's last published works before retirement-so expect massive publicity and sky-high sales. Viking has just published a revised edition of the Dark Tower series' first book, The Gunslinger, which could attract new fans to the series, and Scribner recently released Stephen King's The Dark Tower: A Concordance, Volume I, by Robin Furth, to give series readers a thorough refresher course of who's who in books I-IV. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

King, S., & Guidall, G. (2003). Wolves of the Calla (Unabridged). Simon & Schuster Audio.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

King, Stephen and George Guidall. 2003. Wolves of the Calla. Simon & Schuster Audio.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

King, Stephen and George Guidall. Wolves of the Calla Simon & Schuster Audio, 2003.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

King, S. and Guidall, G. (2003). Wolves of the calla. Unabridged Simon & Schuster Audio.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

King, Stephen, and George Guidall. Wolves of the Calla Unabridged, Simon & Schuster Audio, 2003.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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