Subject: A lot more than just the last scene disappointed. (Spoilers)
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Posted on: 2014-06-01 14:33:00 UTC

Pretty much everything following Algul Siento felt really rushed. Considering how much page space was dedicated to developing the characters of the Algul's leadership, compared to the two half-donkeyed fight scenes against Mordred and the Crimson King, it feels like VII should have been split into two books, with the last one expanding on the King way more. And making him, you know, actually threatening and monstrous?

I actually didn't mind that final scene after the "warning." It makes a disturbing amount of sense to me, and it was hinted at pretty heavily in nearly every scene Roland shared with Walter. I'm convinced the Crimson King was also aware of the recursion, but couldn't figure out how to tell Roland, since telling the truth would make Roland automatically assume it was a lie. That's why he spends his time on the Tower balcony going back and forth between trying to kill Roland and begging him to stop and listen, even after he had been reduced to a pair of eyeballs and Roland was already inside the Tower.

Random Fan Theory: I believe the thing in the tunnels under Castle Discordia is the same one as the one from Children of the Corn. The monster in the latter definitely seems like a holdover from the receding of the Prim, with the movies implying it had been around since before Europeans colonized the Americas. It's called He Walks Behind the Rows (of Corn), but in the movie version, the little psychic girl writes it as "He Who Walks Behind the Rose." And if you equate Roland with representing the quest to reach the field of roses, that's exactly what the one in Dark Tower VII was doing. Of course, this assumes that HWWBtR moved, one way or the other, between In-World and one of the Earths connected with the Tower, but that's far from unusual for this series.

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