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13 chapters - View chapters and summaries
| Name | Aliases | Role |
|---|---|---|
Roland Deschain The last of the gunslingers and the sole surviving member of a knightly order sworn to protect the Beams that hold the multiverse together. Roland has pursued the Man in Black across a dying world for years, driven by a singular obsession with the Dark Tower - the nexus of all realities. Trained from boyhood in Gilead, he is one of the finest warriors alive, possessed of an almost supernatural speed and accuracy with his revolvers. He is also ruthless, willing to put the quest above all else - a quality that defines him across eight books. | The Gunslinger, The Last Gunslinger, Roland of Gilead | Protagonist |
Walter o'Dim The primary antagonist of the early Dark Tower books and one of Stephen King's most recurring villains across his wider fiction. A sorcerer of vast age and power, Walter has manipulated events across countless worlds and centuries. He is the Man in Black whom Roland has been pursuing since the first line of the series. Devious and theatrical, he is a figure of genuine menace. | The Man in Black, Randall Flagg, Marten Broadcloak, Walter Padick, Richard Fanin | Antagonist |
Eddie Dean A heroin addict from 1987 New York, drawn into Mid-World through one of the doors on the beach. Quick-witted and irreverent, Eddie has a gift for defusing tension through humour that masks a deep well of courage. He becomes one of Roland's most capable and loyal companions. | The Prisoner, Eddie Cantora | Major |
Enrico Balazar A cunning, meticulous organised crime boss who operates from a midtown New York office, controlling Eddie Dean through heroin addiction. | Supporting | |
Jack Mort A prim New York accountant who is secretly a serial killer known as the Pusher. He caused both of Odetta Holmes's tragedies and was about to kill Jake Chambers before Roland took control of his body. | Supporting | |
Jake Chambers A boy from New York who finds himself drawn into Mid-World, where he becomes a companion to Roland and his ka-tet. Perceptive and brave beyond his years, Jake possesses a low-level psychic ability and bonds deeply with the billy-bumbler Oy. | Major | |
Susannah Dean A civil rights activist from 1964 New York with dissociative identity disorder, drawn into Mid-World through one of the doors on the beach. Her two identities - the composed Odetta Holmes and the volatile, dangerous Detta Walker - must find a way to coexist. A wheelchair user who lost her legs below the knee in a subway accident, she becomes one of Roland's most formidable companions. | Odetta Holmes, Detta Walker, Lady of Shadows, Susannah-Mia, Susannah-Detta | Major |
Jack Andolini Enrico Balazar's chief enforcer, known as Cully. A flat-eyed, dangerous man who pursues Eddie through the door between worlds. | Minor |
| Name | Type |
|---|---|
| Ka-tet of the Nineteen and Ninety-nine | Faction |
| Date | Event | Details |
|---|---|---|
May 1987 | Publication | Received more warmly than its predecessor, with reviewers noting the significant shift in pace and the strength of the new characters. Nominated for the Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel in 1988. Where The Gunslinger had been cold and elliptical, The Drawing of the Three was propulsive and character-driven, and many readers consider it the true beginning of the series. Eddie Dean and Susannah Holmes were immediately embraced as among King's finest creations. King himself has said it is the book where the series became something he had not planned - larger, stranger, and more emotionally alive than he had imagined. |
1988 | Award Nominated | Locus Award Fantasy novel category, 16th place |
| Award Nominated |
Locus Award Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel |
Received more warmly than its predecessor, with reviewers noting the significant shift in pace and the strength of the new characters. Nominated for the Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel in 1988. Where The Gunslinger had been cold and elliptical, The Drawing of the Three was propulsive and character-driven, and many readers consider it the true beginning of the series. Eddie Dean and Susannah Holmes were immediately embraced as among King's finest creations. King himself has said it is the book where the series became something he had not planned - larger, stranger, and more emotionally alive than he had imagined.
Locus Award
Fantasy novel category, 16th place
Locus Award
Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel