![]() ![]() This trait itself is seemingly shared with his niece, Sesha. Although initially thought to be him being insulting and condescending, it was later revealed that Yeon genuinely did like those names despite their obvious childishness. This is seen where he named the newborn Phoenix, "Chirpy" and when he obtained his Magical Dragon, he attempted to name it "Growl" and "Roar". However despite his rather advanced intellect and tactical genius, Yeon-Woo does indeed possess a childish side, where he was noted to possess a very bad sense of imagination when naming things and has a tendency of naming things with names usually though up by toddlers. Unlike his younger brother who could be categorized as a natural genius, all his achievements all came from being a hard worker through which he was able to achieve results that are reflective of his effort. He often had to try over and over again to solve a problem, but he tried not to show the efforts he made, pretending he was doing fine. Yeon-woo was different from his younger brother who did everything effortlessly. Yeon-woo is a hard-working and determined person who greatly cherishes his family. Giant God ( Transcendent) - Chapter 771.Alternative Ego of the Black King ( Transcendent) - Chapter 755.Giant Demonic Divine Dragon ( Transcendent) - Chapter 704.Supreme God of Olympus ( Transcendent) - Chapter 599.Throne of Death ( Transcendent) - Chapter 389.Soldier ( Mortal) - Before the Story Starts.Child ( Mortal) - Before Story Starts - The original identity & essence of Cha Yeon-woo.The divine power of a God, the demonic magic power of a Demon, the magic power of Dragons, and even the fighting spirit of Giants… It seemed as though the power of the four races, all transcendent species, had been crammed into one existence. With the Dragon's Authority, Yeon-woo gains blue (Dragon)/black (Demon)/golden scales (God) all over his body except his face, large fangs in place of his teeth, bright yellow reptilian eyes, dragon wings on his back and claws on his hands and feet.Īfter transcending, his True Body was a huge dark-red dragon that would make most solar systems pale in comparison. Due to being an athlete as a teen and a part of the army as an adult, he is very fit and has well balanced muscles. Let’s get started.Yeon-Woo is a handsome young man with short black hair and dark eyes. Together, they form a dark constellation of stories that generations have traced, in wonder and fear and hope.īelow, I've ranked King's books in order from worst to best. That still leaves over sixty novels and more than a dozen collections of tales. Any published stories compiled within a larger collection will not be ranked singularly. The man has written over seventy books, so some nod to brevity is required. The following list is an attempt to rank King’s published work in all its darkness, weatherworn beauty, and surprising weirdness. Of course, in so long and varied a career, there are exhilarating highs, a few bewildering lows, and many unexpected diversions. Nat Cassidy, author of this year’s Mary: An Awakening of Terror, put it best, describing King as his “mother tongue.” He is not just a writer he is an industry, an aesthetic, a genre of one. I have interviewed hundreds of horror writers from all across the genre’s wide spectrum, and when asked for their inspirations and their gateways to fearful fiction, so many leap immediately to King. But for millions of readers and writers, he is our North Star, our Southern Cross. Such prolificacy has often led to sniffing criticism from those who consider him “merely” a horror writer (as if horror is anything “mere”). Almost everything he has ever written has been optioned or adapted for the screen, in some cases several times. King has regularly published two or three books per year, a stream of words that flows incessantly west towards Hollywood. He arrived during a resurgent interest in all things frightening–following the success of Ira Levin's Rosemary’s Baby (1967) and William Peter Blatty’s The Exorcist (1971)-and quickly set about reshaping the genre in his own image. Since the publication of his first novel Carrie, just shy of fifty years ago, King has held dominion over the landscape of horror. There will probably never be another author like Stephen King. ![]()
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