The Sentinel-Record

‘Sleeping Beauties’ lacks page-turning intensity

- ROB MERRILL

“Sleeping Beauties” (Scribner), by Stephen and Owen King.

Of all the gifts a father can give his son, near the top must be a co-written novel. After all, slapping the name Stephen King on the cover pretty much guarantees a best-seller.

But King fans who crack open “Sleeping Beauties” may be disappoint­ed. The book lacks the page-turning intensity found in so many of his classics. Father and son started with an intriguing premise: What if men and women were separated into two different worlds? Would the men freak out? Would the women create a kinder, gentler society? They’re existentia­l questions that would seem to lend themselves to a 700-page book, but the novel’s answers to both don’t seem nuanced enough.

The plot is relatively simple. One day all the women in the world get wrapped up in cocoons as soon as they fall asleep. If anyone tries to wake them up, they turn into feral beasts and don’t hesitate to kill their loved ones. As they start to realize this, some women do whatever they can not to slumber, from superblack coffee to cocaine. Most of the men react in predictabl­e ways — drinking, looting and arguing over whether to murder a mysterious woman who calls herself Evie and is the only female who can sleep and wake up.

The book opens with Evie literally emerging from a tree trunk in a cloud of moths. She’s certainly the most intriguing character, but her existence is explained away as supernatur­al. She’s been sent to Earth, we’re told, but by whom? And why? The Kings let those questions linger and instead focus on the men who want to kill Evie versus the men who want to save her.

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