The Stephen King Thread

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That's an oldie but goodie, back in his simpler days. Sometimes the older books can be easier to read because they are less complicated. I think he tends to wander off point from time to time in his newer books.
 
The only stephen king book I think I ever read was "Cujo," and I can't honestly tell you with complete certainty that I read it. I just know I borrowed it from the library way back in the day.

That was the first Stephen King book I ever read, when I was 12. It cured any fear I had of horror movies.

I'm re-reading The Shining right now. My paperback copy is so old it's got an ancient cover, the pages are turning yellow, and it still has the last bookmark I used inside - which was a ticket stub from 1997. :wow:

And it's still scary as hell. I love the movie, but it's nothing like the book.
 
Plot Synopsis for Under the Dome
Posted: March 20, 2009, 20:57:28 | Section: Book » Under the Dome

Here is a first look at the plot of Under the Dome:


On an entirely normal, beautiful fall day in Chester’s Mills, Maine, the town is inexplicably and suddenly sealed off from the rest of the world by an invisible force field. Planes crash into it and fall from the sky in flaming wreckage, a gardener’s hand is severed as “the dome” comes down on it, people running errands in the neighboring town are divided from their families, and cars explode on impact. No one can fathom what this barrier is, where it came from, and when—or if—it will go away.

Dale Barbara, Iraq vet and now a short-order cook, finds himself teamed with a few intrepid citizens—town newspaper owner Julia Shumway, a physician’s assistant at the hospital, a select-woman, and three brave kids. Against them stands Big Jim Rennie, a politician who will stop at nothing—even murder—to hold the reins of power, and his son, who is keeping a horrible secret in a dark pantry. But their main adversary is the Dome itself. Because time isn’t just short. It’s running out
 
Stephen King completes epic novel after 25 years
Under the Dome, which King began writing in the 1980s, runs to more than 1,000 pages and will be published in November


It's been incubating for 25 years but Stephen King is finally ready to show the world the 1,000-plus page epic he first attempted writing in the 1980s. Under the Dome, in which an invisible force field seals off a Maine town from the world, is due to be published this November, his publishers have said.

Weighing in at a whopping 1,120 pages, Under the Dome is a return for the bestselling author to the arm-breaking heft of his classic novels The Stand and It. King told an audience at the Library of Congress in Washington DC last year that he'd first had the idea for the book 25 years ago, and made a stab at writing it. "I tried this once before when I was a lot younger, but the project was just too big for me and I let it go, I let it slide," he said. "But it was a terrific idea and it never entirely left my mind. It just kinda stayed there and hung out, and every now and then it would say write me, and eventually I did."

Set in the town of Chester's Mills, Maine, "on an entirely normal, beautiful fall day", inhabitants suddenly find that the town has been sealed off by an invisible force field. "Planes crash into it and fall from the sky in flaming wreckage, a gardener's hand is severed as 'the dome' comes down on it, people running errands in the neighbouring town are divided from their families, and cars explode on impact," King revealed on his website. "No one can fathom what this barrier is, where it came from, and when – or if – it will go away."

Characters in the cast of more than 100 include Dale Barbara, a Gulf veteran and now a cook, the town's newspaper owner Julia Shumway, a physician's assistant at the hospital and three children. They're up against an evil politician, Big Jim Rennie – who's desperate to hold onto power and will stop at nothing, even murder – and his son, who in classic King style, "is keeping a horrible secret in a dark pantry". Meanwhile, time under the Dome is running out.

King, the author of more than 50 books, has said that the new novel "deals with some of the same issues that The Stand does, but in a more allegorical way".

"Since it's over a thousand pages long, I sure hope people like it," he said earlier this year in his regular column for Entertainment Weekly.
 
Thanks for keeping us updated, mate. I'm really looking forward to this.
 
Me, too. It sounds great. :) I'll read anything King puts out.
 
That's a good job after the last couple he's released. lol
 
Third Talisman book in a year one or two?
Posted: April 8, 2009, 12:40:45 | Section: Book » The Talisman 3

Bev Vincent reported this in regards of the Writer's Digest: An Epic Conversation on Writing:


Lanny F. McKay tells me that one of the King's most interesting quotes was about how he has occasionally enjoyed the collaborative process, "enough so that Peter and I will probably write the third and last Talisman book in one or two years."
 
I loved Black House, but wasn't as keen on The Talisman. I'll look forward to this, just like I look forward t everything lol.
 
Awsome, can't wait. I liked the Talisman better the second time around. I wonder if Jack
Will be going back to End-World so we can see if he had a behind the scenes role to play in the business of the Tower, like Speedy suggested at the end of Black House.
 
It took me three tries to read Talisman, but when I finally got through it I really liked it. :D
 
I loved Black House, but wasn't as keen on The Talisman. I'll look forward to this, just like I look forward t everything lol.

I was the other way around. Having read Bleak House (Dickens) since then, I think maybe not having read Bleak House hindered my ability to appreciate Black House, but I just didn't get into it (mostly because of the style of storytelling, but like I say, I didn't get the Dickens allusion).
 
My first King book was The Dark Half, followed closely by The Eyes of the Dragon. I was 12.

After that, I couldn't get enough. I've read all of his classic stuff, but I'm a little behind on some of his most recent.

Up until I was 15, my favorite book of his was Needful Things. Then I read the Gunslinger.

The Dark Tower is, in my oh-so-humble opinion, the SINGLE GREATEST BOOK SERIES IN THE HISTORY OF MANKIND. I've never read a series of books that made me care for these characters, and yet be so damned EPIC, over SEVEN BOOKS.

Most recently I've finished Low Men in Yellow Coats (Great, by the way) and the only book of his I've ever really not cared for was Dreamcatcher.
 
Just finished The Tommyknockers and I really really enjoyed it, next King book I want to read is Dreamcatcher. Opinions?
 
Just finished The Tommyknockers and I really really enjoyed it, next King book I want to read is Dreamcatcher. Opinions?

Dreamcatcher is one of his weaker books... but you liked The Tommyknockers so you could think it's amazing.
 
Just finished The Tommyknockers and I really really enjoyed it, next King book I want to read is Dreamcatcher. Opinions?
I liked both of those. You have to wonder how he thinks all this crazy stuff up. :p I'm not sure I've read a King book that I haven't liked at all.
 
Dreamcatcher is one of his weaker books... but you liked The Tommyknockers so you could think it's amazing.

Tommyknockers is regarded as a weak book? Everyone I talked to recommended it and I enjoyed it. I've heard mixed things about Dreamcatcher so we'll see.

I liked both of those. You have to wonder how he thinks all this crazy stuff up. :p I'm not sure I've read a King book that I haven't liked at all.
Me neither, I've read about 10 by now and I enjoyed each in their own way.
 
Me neither, I've read about 10 by now and I enjoyed each in their own way.
LOL, I joined the King Book Club a while back, where they sent you a book each month, until I had them all. I am not missing a single one. :)
 
LOL, I joined the King Book Club a while back, where they sent you a book each month, until I had them all. I am not missing a single one. :)
Haha Wow!, aren't there like over 50?? Would you recommend the Dark Tower series?? I've always wanted to read them but 7 novels sounds a bit intimidating :o
 
Haha Wow!, aren't there like over 50?? Would you recommend the Dark Tower series?? I've always wanted to read them but 7 novels sounds a bit intimidating :o
Could be! I have almost a whole bookshelf just for him! I liked the Dark Tower series. What's cool about it is the books start off small and get bigger so it's not like you have to tackle anything huge right away. I would recommend them yes. :)
 
Haha Wow!, aren't there like over 50?? Would you recommend the Dark Tower series?? I've always wanted to read them but 7 novels sounds a bit intimidating :o

If you decide to read the Dark Tower novels, also check out The Stand, It, Salem's Lot, Eyes of the Dragon, and Black House...oh! and Insomnia too. :cwink::yay:
 
Could be! I have almost a whole bookshelf just for him! I liked the Dark Tower series. What's cool about it is the books start off small and get bigger so it's not like you have to tackle anything huge right away. I would recommend them yes. :)

Good deal, thanks :up:

If you decide to read the Dark Tower novels, also check out The Stand, It, Salem's Lot, Eyes of the Dragon, and Black House...oh! and Insomnia too. :cwink::yay:

All my friends who've read Stephen King, they all say that The Stand is the best so I've kinda been saving it for a period when I can devote myself to it (1100+ pages you kinda have to :o). I've read It, but haven't read Insomnia or Salem's Lot, I havent even heard of Eyes of the Dragon or Black House. What are those two about?

The ones I've read are It, The Shining, Pet Sematary, Cujo, Carrie, Desperation, The Green Mile, Misery and I just finished The Tommyknockers yesterday.
 
Eyes of the Dragon is kind of like a fairy tale set in Garlan and Delain. Its about a King named Roland who is murdered. One of his boys suspects it was his court wizard, Flagg. The other falls under Flagg's sway. Unfortunately it happens to be the one that succeeds King Roland. I'm thinking its set in the past of All-World, where the Dark Tower novels take place.

Black House was co-written with Peter Straub and is the second book in a planned trilogy starring a character named Jack Sawyer, the first book being The Talisman. Black House isn't a direct sequel--I read it before I read The Talisman and it didn't spoil any plot points for The Talisman--and is strongly linked with the Dark Tower novels. Its about a little close-knit town that is plagued by a killer known as the Kingfisher, who targets children and seems to have some cannibalistic tendacies. It also has some of King's cooler characters, the Thunder Five, a gang of intellectual bikers and one of the biggest pricks in any of his books, a reporter named Wendell Green.

Of all the books I recommended, Insomnia has the closest ties to the Dark Tower novels but can be read without having read any of the DT novels.
 
I have a theory that once you read three Stephen King books you pretty much get the gist of what he's all about. The Green Mile was a fantastic story, though.

By far the best Stephen King book I've encountered is On Writing. He's a pretty funny guy and while he seems to deviate between humble and pompous, he's a charming writer nonetheless with some good advice to boot.
 
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