Hearts in Atlantis IS a good book, I totally agree. I read it after I read the Dark Tower series. Yep, the low men in yellow coats go after Ted Brautigan in the beginning of Hearts. In the Dark Tower series Ted is a "breaker". Psychics break the beams that support the Tower.
I loved the end of Hearts in Atlantis. Such a fucking good way to end that book.
Although the one character, the kid who stole Bobby's baseball glove, grows up and goes to the war and still has the glove....do you remember who I'm talking about? I think he's the one I mean....the guy who has like a complete double life as a blind panhandler.
I never quite got why he would go blind for periods of time...
Hey there. I haven't kept up with this thread. Sorry.
I know what part of the book you are talking about: Blind Willy. The guy who helped beat up Carol in the first part of the book with Ted (a tracker, you said? I thought it was breaker. Heck, I'm not sure, 'cause I don't read the sci-fi stuff).
Anyway, I think what you are referring to, about why Blind Willie would go blind once in a while? Are you talking about when the guy is on the streets in NY and after a while, he can't see? I didn't quite get that either, and I just assumed it was because he was wearing the blind glasses and they messed up his vision after a while? Almost like when you're outside in direct sunlight and you come inside, you can't see properly for a few mins while your vision adjusts? I don't know--I think I'm wrong, though. I don't experience vision problems when I'm wearing sunglasses outside.
That's a really good question. Too bad Stephen King is now so busy that he doesn't answer questions anymore on his web site, because I'd kind of like to know what that was about now too. Knowing King, however, and having read his memoir, it was probably not something intentionally inserted to have symbolic meaning. He doesn't really do that. He did name James Coffey that in Green Mile for the initials (JC) and the symbolism, but overall, he doesn't really advocate reaching for symbolism.
Good question!
I really loved this book. All four parts of it. The Blind Willie part was the shortest, but gosh, it was good, wasn't it? "I am heartily sorry for hurting Carol. I am heartily sorry for hurting Carol." Man, that guy was so weird.
Great book. I absolutely loved it.