Add to library
You don't have any lists yet. Create one in My Library.
Go to My LibraryAdd to library
You don't have any lists yet. Create one in My Library.
Go to My LibraryKujo
- Language
- Turkish
- Published in
- Publisher
- Altin Kitaplar
- Pages
- 306
- ISBN
- 9789754059830
When Donna and Tad's car breaks down at the remote Camber farm, their lives intersect with the now-unrecognizable Cujo in the most terrifying way imaginable. Trapped in the sweltering heat of their car, a simple errand becomes a desperate struggle for survival against a relentless, monstrous force. This is not just a story about a rabid dog; it is a gripping examination of primal fear and the ferocious lengths a mother will go to protect her child when all semblances of a safe world have been torn away.
Subjects
Original edition details
Other editions (63)
Other editions

Cujo 40th Anniversary Limited Edition
2022 • PS Publishing
English

Cujo
1994 • Turtleback
English

Cujo
1983 • Charnwood
English

Cujo Collectors Edition
1994 • Plume
English

Cujo
2018 • Luitingh Sijthoff
Dutch

Cujo (Em Portuguese do Brasil)
2016 • Suma de Letras
Portuguese

Cujo
2016 • Simon and Schuster
English

Cujo A Novel
2018 • Scribner
English

Cujo
1982 • New American Library
English

Cujo Roman
2007 • Heyne
German

Cujo Special Sales
2011 • Hodder & Stoughton
English

Cujo
1995 • Chivers Press
English

Cujo (Spanish Edition)
2020 • PRH Grupo Editorial
Spanish

Cujo
1981 • Debolsillo
Spanish

Cujo
1984 • J'ai lu
French

Cujo
1992 • Sperling Paperback
Italian

CUJO
2014 • DEBOLSILLO
Spanish

Cujo
2014 • Wydawnictwo Albatros Andrzej Kuryłowicz
Polish

Cujo (G K Hall Large Print Book Series)
1993 • G K Hall & Co
English

Cujo
1998 • Little, Brown Book Group Limited
English

Cujo
2009 • Penguin USA, Inc.
English

Куджо. Cujo. Kudzho
2016 • «Книжный Клуб «Клуб Семейного Досуга»
Ukrainian

Cujo
2015 • Wydawnictwo Albatros
Polish

Cujo
1998 • Little, Brown Book Group Limited
English

Cujo
1983 • Grijalbo, Editorial
Spanish

Cujo A Novel
1981 • Simon and Schuster
English

Cujo A Novel
1982 • Signet
English

Cujo ein unheimlicher Thriller
1986 • Bastei-Verlag Lübbe
German

Cujo
2003 • Debolsillo
Spanish

Cujo
1982 • Albin Michel
French

Cujo
2000 • J'ai lu
French

Cujo
1982 • Paw Prints
English

Cujo
1993 • Warner
English

Cujo (Spanish Edition)
1991 • Grijalbo
Spanish

Cujo
2009 • Signet
English

Cujo
1982 • Perfection Learning
English

Cujo
1983 • Penguin Publishing Group
English

Kudzho
1999 • AST
Russian

Cujo
1983 • Penguin Group USA, Incorporated
English

Cujo
2011 • Hodder
English

Cujo
1982 • Signet
English

Cujo
2008 • Hodder & Stoughton
English

Cujo
2006 • Hodder
English

Cujo
1982 • Little, Brown Book Group Limited
English

Cujo
1982 • Grijalbo Mondadori
Spanish

Cujo
2014 • Wydawnictwo Albatros Andrzej Kuryłowicz
Polish
![Cujo [In Japanese Language]](https://images.isbndb.com/covers/15768453483648.jpg)
Cujo [In Japanese Language]
1983 • Shinchosha
Japanese

Cujo
2016 • Simon & Schuster Audio
English

Kudzho
2000 • AST
Russian

Cujo
2011 • Hodder & Stoughton
English

Cujo
2006 • Librairie Generale Francaise, LGF
French

Kudzho
2001 • AST
Russian

Cujo
1982 • Macdonald
English

Cujo
1982 • Penguin Group USA, Incorporated
English

Stephen King #2, 3 Vol. Boxed Set
1992 • Penguin Books
English

Cujo
2008 • Hodder & Stoughton
English

Cujo
2006 • Plaza & Janes Editories, S.A.
Spanish

Cujo
1981 • Turtleback
English

Cujo THRILLER. INS DTSCH. UBERTR. V. HARRO CHRISTENSEN
2001 • Bastei Lübbe
German

Cujo ein unheimlicher thriller
1983 • Bastei-Verlag Lübbe
German

Cujo
2010 • Penguin Audio
English

Cujo
1982 • Grijalbo
Spanish

Cujo
2010 • Hodder & Stoughton
English
Miles away, at the end of a dead-end road, Charity Camber lives in a different kind of quiet desperation. Her husband, Joe, is a hard, controlling man, and she dreams of taking their son, Brett, to visit her sister in Connecticut - a world away from Joe's sullen moods and the grime of his auto garage. When she wins five thousand dollars in the state lottery, she sees her chance. In a tense kitchen standoff, smelling of steak and fear, she barters with her husband. She offers him the winnings, a brand-new chainfall for his shop, and even a promise she despises: she will let Brett go deer hunting with Joe and his drinking cronies in the fall. In exchange, she and Brett get one week of freedom. The bargain is sealed with a grim, joyless act of marital duty in their bedroom, leaving Charity to lie awake under the moonlight, wondering if any escape could possibly be worth the price.
The Cambers' Saint Bernard, Cujo, has always been a good dog. Weighing nearly two hundred pounds, he is a gentle giant, beloved by ten-year-old Brett. But one hot June morning, a rabbit chase leads him to a small, hidden cave in the north field. The hole is home to a colony of bats, and as Cujo squeezes his head inside, barking furiously at the trapped rabbit, the terrified creatures swarm out. One, sick with rabies, latches onto the dog's nose, its needle-sharp teeth sinking deep. Cujo retreats, whining, the bat's foul taste in his mouth. He does not know that a fire has been lit in his blood, a slow, degenerative sickness that will soon begin to burn away his memory, his gentleness, and his mind, leaving only a vessel of agonizing pain and mindless fury.
As the Fourth of July weekend approaches, the separate threads of these lives begin to pull taut. Vic, needing to save his business, prepares to leave on a ten-day trip to Boston and New York, the rift between him and Donna raw and unresolved. In his haste and worry, he forgets to call Joe Camber about fixing the failing carburetor on Donna's Pinto. Charity and Brett, meanwhile, pack their bags. On the morning of their departure, Brett sees Cujo in the fog-drenched yard, his eyes red and filmed over, foam dripping from his muzzle. The boy knows something is terribly wrong, but his mother, terrified of losing their one chance to escape, silences him. “He just scared you,” she insists, and they drive away, leaving the sick dog behind with Joe, who is himself preparing to leave for Boston with his friend Gary Pervier as soon as his wife and son are on the bus.
The sickness in Cujo's head becomes a buzzing, roaring agony. The world turns into a crazy quilt of threatening smells and terrifying sounds. His simple dog's life, once governed by love for his boy and a desire for food and pats, is now ruled by a single, overwhelming imperative: to kill the things that are causing his pain. He finds Gary Pervier urinating into the honeysuckle beside his house and tears his throat out. When Joe Camber comes looking for his friend, he finds the body and realizes with dawning horror what has happened to his dog. He runs for the phone, but Cujo is already there, a two-hundred-pound monster of matted fur and blood, waiting in the shadows of the kitchen.
The heat is relentless. Donna Trenton, with four-year-old Tad beside her, nurses her ailing Pinto along the winding country roads toward Camber's Garage. The car jerks and stalls, coughs and backfires, but she coaxes it up the long, steep hill to the isolated farmhouse. As she coasts into the driveway, the engine gives one last shudder and dies. The yard is silent, empty. No one appears to be home. She gets out of the car, intending to let Tad out of his seatbelt, and a low, thick growling sound stops her cold. From the shadows of the barn, Cujo emerges. It is the same dog Tad once petted, but its coat is now matted with blood and mud, its eyes are red and weeping, and a terrible, senseless hatred radiates from it like heat.
Donna scrambles back into the car an instant before the dog slams into the driver's-side door with the force of a battering ram. She fumbles Tad's window shut just as Cujo's bloody muzzle thrusts inside, snarling and snapping. The car will not start. The horn, which she blasts in a desperate SOS, eventually weakens and dies as the battery drains. They are trapped. The sun beats down, turning the small car into an oven. The world outside the windows becomes a shimmering, heat-distorted prison yard, patrolled by a single, tireless, and insane guard.
Hours stretch into a day, then a night, then another day. The heat is a torment. Thirst becomes an agony. Tad, small and vulnerable, begins to fade, slipping into a delirious state where he talks of friendly ducks in a cool, green pond. Donna's hope, pinned first on the Cambers' return, then on the daily mailman, withers and dies. The mail has been held. No one is coming. The dog waits, a patient, slobbering engine of death, its own body wracked with the final, violent stages of the disease. It seems to watch her, to know her, as if it is not just a sick animal but a physical manifestation of all the monsters Tad has ever feared in his closet.
A police cruiser finally turns into the driveway. For a heart-stopping moment, salvation seems at hand. But Cujo has been hiding. He ambushes Sheriff Bannerman before the man can even call for backup, tearing him apart with a savage finality that extinguishes Donna's last flicker of hope. She knows now that no one is coming to save them. Tad is slipping away, his breathing shallow, his body wracked by a small, terrible convulsion. It is up to her.
Gritting her teeth against the pain in her own dog-bitten leg, she gets out of the car, grabbing an old, splintered baseball bat from the weeds. What follows is a primal, bloody battle under the blaring afternoon sun. She swings the bat again and again, screaming with a fury born of terror and a mother's love, breaking the dog's bones, feeling the splintered wood of the bat give way in her hands. The dying animal lunges one last time, and with a final, desperate thrust, she drives the jagged remnant of the bat into its eye and through to its brain. The monster is dead. But as Vic's car finally pulls into the driveway, drawn by a terrible premonition, he finds his wife standing blood-soaked and triumphant over the dog's corpse, only to discover that their son, Tad, lies still and silent in the back of the Pinto, a small victim not of the monster's teeth, but of the relentless, indifferent heat.
No discussions yet for this book.
Delete Discussion
Are you sure you want to delete this discussion? This action cannot be undone.
Rating Sources
Reviewers frequently praise Cujo as a gripping and intense thriller, highlighting Stephen King's masterful ability to blend psychological horror with raw emotion. Many found the storytelling and character development to be among King's best, appreciating the deep dive into the lives of the town's inhabitants and how their various struggles converge. The book is lauded for its relentless tension, which keeps readers on edge, and its exploration of claustrophobic scenarios, fear, survival, and fate adds significant depth beyond the immediate scares. The central premise, involving a once-friendly St. Bernard turned terrifying menace, is described as both chilling and heartbreaking, presenting a truly tragic figure. Some readers, even those who typically dislike dogs, were impressed by King's skill in evoking empathy for the titular character. The narrative is often called riveting, with an ending that delivers a powerful emotional punch, leaving a lasting impression.
Despite its strengths, several reviewers point out significant criticisms, often noting that the book was written during a period of the author's intense substance abuse, which some feel impacted the narrative's coherence and structure. A common complaint is that a large portion of the book focuses on subplots and character exposition rather than the core horror element, leading some to perceive it as "filler." These digressions, particularly into domestic dramas or marketing issues, are sometimes described as tedious or uninteresting, detracting from the main tension and slowing the pace. Critics also mentioned a lack of credible motivations for some characters, a "soap opera" style, and an over-reliance on coincidences to drive the plot. The unconventional structure, with a notable absence of chapter breaks, also proved challenging for some readers who preferred a more traditional narrative flow.
Ultimately, Cujo is viewed as a powerful and impactful read, with many considering it a classic and a must-read for horror and Stephen King fans. Even those with reservations often acknowledge its fundamental quality and the author's undeniable talent for creating an immersive, terrifying experience. The book is particularly recommended for readers who appreciate realistic horror rooted in plausible, everyday fears, as its events are described as all too possible. It appeals to those who enjoy deep character studies and the exploration of complex social and relational dynamics alongside their scares. While its intense subject matter and emotional impact may be challenging for readers sensitive to animal suffering, its ability to crawl under the skin and remain memorable makes it a compelling choice for those seeking a suspenseful and emotionally charged story within King's interconnected fictional universe.
No reviews yet. Be the first to review this book!
Delete Review
Are you sure you want to delete this review? This action cannot be undone.







