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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Roaring Good Prequel!
I found this book to be a very entertaining read! Most movie tie-in books are lame in my opinion. This book has all of the familiar characters from the movie and describes their actions leading up to where the movie begins. A good plot, plenty of action, a visit to Skull Island, and just a hint of Kong himself make this an enjoyable prequel to the movie! Kong Lives!
Published on December 1, 2005 by James I. Webb

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11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Kind of Pointless, really...
King Kong: The Island of the Skull by Matthew Costello

I hate to be one of those people who talks about how he was really into the current big thing long before the big thing was big. Like the people who talk about how they really liked the Ramones back when they lived next door to them in New Jersey and used to hear the practice in their garage, or people...
Published on November 10, 2005 by Steven D. Ahlquist


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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Roaring Good Prequel!, December 1, 2005
This review is from: The Island of the Skull (King Kong) (Mass Market Paperback)
I found this book to be a very entertaining read! Most movie tie-in books are lame in my opinion. This book has all of the familiar characters from the movie and describes their actions leading up to where the movie begins. A good plot, plenty of action, a visit to Skull Island, and just a hint of Kong himself make this an enjoyable prequel to the movie! Kong Lives!
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11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Kind of Pointless, really..., November 10, 2005
This review is from: The Island of the Skull (King Kong) (Mass Market Paperback)
King Kong: The Island of the Skull by Matthew Costello

I hate to be one of those people who talks about how he was really into the current big thing long before the big thing was big. Like the people who talk about how they really liked the Ramones back when they lived next door to them in New Jersey and used to hear the practice in their garage, or people who really loved the Richard Bachman novels long before they knew they were actually written by Stephen King. I don't want to be that guy, but long before Peter Jackson made it big with The Lord of the Rings I was really into his movies and I thought he was a stellar talent. The rest of the world merely caught up.

I'm also a really big fan of the original King Kong. Where most film students point to the over praised Citizen Kane as the seminal American art movie, I always point to King Kong. The movie had everything: state of the art special effects, a hot chick in peril, dinosaurs, monsters, panic in the streets and startling sequences that are absolutely and forever unforgettable. It might not be the greatest movie ever made, but it's surly in the top ten.

Remaking the movie was inevitable, and it happened before. Dino De Laurentiis did it in 1976, and it was a complete turd. Kong clambered to the top of the World Trade Centers then, and it's arguably the worst disaster to hit those buildings ever. I remember being a kid and looking at some promotional art for the movie. Kong stood atop the WTC towers, one leg on each, holding an exploding jet plane in his hand. Of course, in the movie Kong wasn't nearly large enough to do this, he had to run and leap from one tower to the next, and he was killed by helicopters. I also remember there being a lot of press built around a gigantic robotic Kong built to scale for use in some scenes in the movie. The robot looked completely lame, completely fake, and nothing like the actor in the suit playing Kong in the rest of the movie. The robot got about five seconds of screen time.

Kong has suffered a lot since the 1933 movie. He gained electrical powers in 1962 and fought Godzilla, and in 1967 had to fight a robot version of himself called Mecha-Kong in King Kong Escapes. (Mecha-Kong was controlled by the villainous Dr. Who, related, perhaps to the British television series?) There was a terrible animated television series based on Kong that had a pretty kicking theme song:

King Kong! You know the name of
King Kong! You know the fame of
King Kong! Ten times as big as a man!

Throughout the land you've heard about this wonder.
Listen closely and you will hear the thunder
Oft this mighty ape and he's a friend of man.
So goes the legend, the legend of...

King Kong! You know the name of
King Kong! You know the fame of
King Kong! Ten times as big as a man!

One day a boy, too young to know the danger;
Made a friend of this giant fearsome stranger!
And the life they led on their island home
Became a legend, the legend of...

King Kong! You know the name of
King Kong! You know the fame of
King Kong! Ten times as big as a man!

Despite all the terrible things that have happened to Kong I'm confident that Peter Jackson will still pull off a spectacular remake. Everything I've seen from the movie so far has been knocking me out. I really think that this will be the big budget Hollywood film we've been waiting for all year. The movie comes out December 14, 2005, which seems a long time.

So I picked up King Kong: The Island of the Skull which is billed on the cover as "The official prequel novel to the Universal Pictures movie event!" It's written by Matthew Costello, whose "...innovative work includes groundbreaking and award-winning novels, games and television shows." If true, all his innovation and ground-breaking would need to be brought to bear on a novel in which none of the main characters can be allowed to meet, the big monster, Kong, can only be heard and not seen, and contains no scenes or ideas that might be better or cooler than the movie to come.

The book bounces around three separate plot-lines. We follow the adventures of Ann Darrow, (played in the movie by Naomi Watts) a down-on-her-luck actress, as she becomes desperate for cash and finds a job diving horses off a pier in Atlantic City and avoids gangsters. Girls diving horses off piers to the applause of paying customers seems weird today, but it's real. See here. (http://www.petticoated.com/pdqwinter04/otherdocs/divinghorsesW04.html)

We also follow filmmaker and adventurer Carl Denham (played in the movie by Jack Black) as he heads up a disastrous expedition to the artic in search of killer whales. His best friend loses a leg to a pack of sea lions, and Jack nearly loses the funding for future projects. Big deal. Both Carl Denham and Ann Darrow have real stories in King Kong. All this is just back story disguised as a novel, somewhat interesting, but rather pointless.

The best part of the book, and the only part that actually matters, is the stuff with Sam Kelly, a former Navy diver who joins an ill-fated Portuguese pearl ship that meets its desperate end near Skull Island, home of Kong. Sam's story is interesting, a does provide some interesting context to what comes later. The map Sam draws will ultimately come into the possession of Carl Denham, and this map will lead the crew to Skull Island and the legendary rendezvous with King Kong.

Three plots may seem like a lot to cram into 328 pages, but it isn't. The story arc of any of these characters would barely qualify as a short story anywhere else. The book is slowly paced, especially at the beginning, and is padded with nonsensical asides and odd thoughts from the characters. Take this bit, from page 51. Ann is in Atlantic City, looking for the famous Steel Pier and a job with the diving horses.

"Is it really steel, she wondered? Why would you make a pier out of steel? Wouldn't wood be better? Or was that just dumb?"

I'd go with just dumb. It's like somebody said fill 300 pages no matter what and the writer just went back over the manuscript over and over again, throwing in any old thing he could think of to spread it out and fill the space. Innovative and ground-breaking indeed.

Books like this are unfortunate. The studio probably knew they couldn't get by releasing the old Joe DeVito adaptation of the original movie, it's been in the public domain for years. They needed something they could stamp their "Official Movie Merchandise" symbol on, and they got it. Unfortunately the novel is pointless and unsatisfying.

Despite this, there are some things that tweaked the fan in me. I love good solid historical details like the diving horses bit at the Steel Pier. I like the historical verisimilitude such details provide. I love it when fictional characters and historical figures interact. At one point in the novel Carl Denham runs into Eugene O'Neill, famed playwright and author of Mourning Becomes Elektra. It's the kind of fun, throwaway scene I wish there were more of.

The second bit that intrigued me is much more sinister and weird. On page 305 a native girl from Skull Island is dying in Sam Kelly's arms"

"She opened her mouth, and said words in her language. `Ka-neh, ry-leh nah.'"

Fans of HP Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos stories will know what I'm talking about. Ryleh is the island, somewhere in the south seas, where the dread Cthulhu lies, waiting to destroy the world. It's an island of insanity, monsters, and non-Euclidean geometry. Has Matthew Costello slipped a Cthulhu reference into the King Kong mythology? It couldn't be an accident. Costello should know the horror genre, having scripted the video games The 7th Guest and DOOM 3.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars In the beginning, February 15, 2006
By 
Daniel Pollacchi (Western Australia, Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Island of the Skull (King Kong) (Mass Market Paperback)
Have you seen King Kong at the cinemas or on DVD and wanted certain questions answered; Primarily how Carl Denham obtained the map that showed skull island and about the man that grabbed the map. Well if you want answers to these questions then this is the book for you.

It gives living accounts of characters that appear in the movie of where they were before they all met. Even Kong makes a special appearance; however he is not the main focus of the story.

This is not a story that revolves around Kong. This is most probably the reason why many people would stop reading; however many might want answers to the questions that I did and not be able to put it down.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ge ready to devour this!, November 25, 2005
By 
Mike Strauss "Mike" (Rochester, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Island of the Skull (King Kong) (Mass Market Paperback)
For a Kong Kong fan, this book, a fast-paced story, is filled with surprises but also deals with a lot of what you'd want to know. What did Ann Darrow do before she joining Denham's expedition? Or what was Carl Denham doing in the Arctic before he began his search for Skull Island? Or how did Jack Driscoll's literary life in the Manhattan of the 30s hook him up with Denham? And the whole thing is so amazingly atmospheric, like a lost Kong book from 70 years ago..

But then it addresses the two big questions-where did the map to Skull come from...and, more importantly, what is happening on Skull Island to begin with? I doubt the film will touch on either of those two cool mysteries. But Costelo's book does and so well as we join a deep diving ship on a journey to a Skull Island that I bet Merriam C. Cooper never dreamed of. Highly recommended and bound to be devoured in one day.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An amazing read!, November 25, 2005
This review is from: The Island of the Skull (King Kong) (Mass Market Paperback)
Did not know what to expect from this novel, a prequel. But it turned out to be a totally compelling curtain raiser for what I think will be PJ's new masterpiece. Filled with secrets and stunning scenes, the book moved like a bullet. Now for the film itself!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Under the Sea..., November 14, 2005
By 
Mark Castle (Tampa, Florida) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Island of the Skull (King Kong) (Mass Market Paperback)
I read Island of the Skull in one day. It really started moving once the underwater action began; and the underwater tale is one of the really cool things about it.

Skull Island sits in the Indian Ocean surrounded by--well, best discover it yourself. And the diving (with some amazing creatures) made the myth of the island come to life. You'll read this book, and have lots of ideas about how Kong and company came to exist behind the wall of Fog. As for the main characters (Ann Darrow, Carl Fenham, Jack Driscoll) it's interesting to see how they are fated to come together though you may get impatient to get back to the island.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars This book surprised me. Don't judge too quickly!, November 8, 2005
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Island of the Skull (King Kong) (Mass Market Paperback)
I AM NOT A KID.
In truth, this book gets off to what seems to be a crawlimg start. Once you read a while, though, you'll be glad you did! The early chapters are boring from just about anybody's perspective, but that only makes the later chapters a lot better. Once you reach the point where the author writes from the native girl's perspective, it's a hard book to put down.TRY TO BE A LITTLE PATIENT IN THE BEGINNING!!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A fun read to get you psyched for the coming of KONG, November 7, 2005
By 
Darryl Pickett "derblesnob" (Orlando, FL United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Island of the Skull (King Kong) (Mass Market Paperback)
This tie-in prequel novel doesn't quite stand on its own as a complete story, but instead, lays the groundwork for the events in Peter Jackson's soon-to-be released remake of the classic KING KONG. We track Ann Darrow's rags-to-slightly-better-rags career. We see maverick filmmaker Carl Denham in action, we even discover that paramour-to-be Jack Driscoll is friends with Eugene O'Neill.

There's a little bit of everything here; undersea rescues, wild seals, gangsters, flappers and floozies, even a heart-tugging horse story.

Only a small portion of the book takes place on Skull Island itself, though these passages are well-written, suspenseful and exciting. (These chapters involve newly created characters who won't be in the movie. Such character's fates are, of course, up for grabs.) The island offers up a few scary beasties, but be advised that, apart from some distant roars, the big hairy fellow stays off-stage for this book.

Matthew Costello manages to keep several balls in the air as he has three main narratives and at least seven major characters to keep up with. As a result, none of them are fully drawn. Reader interest is mostly sustained by cliff-hanger chapter endings and a fast-forward storytelling strategy. This was probably a quick turnaround job, as evidenced by a few stylistic lapses and change-in-tense errors. My inner editor flinched a few times.

If, like me, you are really impatient and need something to tide you over until KONG hits the big screen, this slight but enjoyable quickie fits the bill.
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2.0 out of 5 stars a lot of potential sadly unused, November 19, 2005
This review is from: The Island of the Skull (King Kong) (Mass Market Paperback)
having heard of a prequel for jackson's film(a different interpretation from merrian cooper's version) i was convinced that the author would have ample opportunity to write a new adventure story with familiar concepts, possibly rich enough in detail and excitement to stand on it's own. seeing the great respect jackson's team had for the original, my expectations seemed logical at the time.
what i found was pointless elaborations about life in 1932 new york, stretched for more than a third of the book, the tribulations of carl denham and jack driscoll equally stretched and the action and history of skull island reduced to an afterthought. i was disappointed with kong not making an apperance(we all know who he is, so if, as a previous reviewr has mentioned, the author was restricted in scope by the studios, such a decision is evidently a negative factor) as well as not developing the potential of the paleontologist that discovered skull island but was supressed by the authorities, and so on.

for a truely wonderful prequel read kong: king of skull island by joe devito and brad strickland.
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4.0 out of 5 stars It is what it is..., November 15, 2005
This review is from: The Island of the Skull (King Kong) (Mass Market Paperback)
no this book isnt about kong himself but a pretty good lead up to the film.it starts out slow enough but its a really good adventure when it gets going. since we all know whats to come, this book really gets you into the mood of the story. not a great book on its own but if you love king kong and cant wait until the movie hits , then this will get you ready for the feel of the people and the island itself!
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The Island of the Skull (King Kong)
The Island of the Skull (King Kong) by Matthew J. Costello (Mass Market Paperback - October 25, 2005)
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