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Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption by Stephen King

​“The tale of Andy Dufresne and how he served his time at Shawshank prison, as told through the eyes of his friend and fellow inmate, Red. Dark and disturbing but also compulsively readbale. I finished it in 2 days. Also enjoyable is Frank Darabont's 1994 film adaptation, "The Shawshank Redemption."

⭐⭐⭐⭐

Pros: Red has a soothing, drawl, making the reading easy and flowing/Since I saw the film first, I couldn't help but compare the book though I was pleased to find that the two were very similar. 

Cons: Things got a bit rambling a bit at the beginning/Since I saw the film first I couldn't help but compare the book but this ended up not being a con. 

Full Review:

The state of Maine has a prison. Shawshank Redemption. And Red is the guy that can get you things. He also happens to be the only guilty man in Shawshank but that's netiher here nor there. He meets Andy Dufresne for business purposes at first and he finds him to be a calm, cool man and Red likes him immeidately. Andy's request to get a rock hammer, a small tool used to cut and shape rocks is their first of many business transactions. And soon a friendship is formed. 

Though Red's eyes we see the harshness of prison life. How Andy, in his quiet, unflappable way, weathers it all. And how over the many years they spent together, he never even realized what Andy was up to. This is a dark but readable mystery/thriller told in Kings' brutally honest way. Since I saw the film first, it was the only thing I could compare it to and I honestly thought the film did the novella amazing justice.  

I think a re-watch may be in order. 

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