To say that readers love Stephen King is a huge understatement. The most recent count of his total sales came to a whopping 350 million and his affable online presence, no-nonsense attitude to transphobia and right-wing politics, and extremely generous charitable donations have only made him more popular – especially among the younger end of the social media generation.
In his near-half century career King has written over 60 novels, 200 short stories and five non-fiction books, including the peerless memoir On Writing which has inspired a generation of authors. But what keeps his readers coming back are his ideas. He’s mastered several genres with accessible writing and has a nasty, brilliant mind. Yet his concepts are deceptively simple. For that very reason, his work has been adapted almost constantly for the screen.
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During the early part of his career, King had to face his own demons. While his childhood fears inspired his writing, drugs and alcohol became intertwined with his working practise. During the 1980s, drugs took over to the point that his wife, Tabitha, staged an intervention with his family and friends in 1987. King has been sober ever since.
The influence of substance abuse on his work is especially evident in books like 1987’s The Tommyknockers. He told Rolling Stone, “The book is about 700 pages long, and I’m thinking, ‘There’s probably a good 350-page novel in there’”, while in On Writing he said he had no memory of writing 1981’s Cujo.
But with so many novels on offer, where do you begin? We’ve picked eight of the best Stephen King books for you to get started – one of which is a series, a cheat we hope you’ll let slide.
To make a fair playing field we focused on fiction, and on novels specifically. We were looking not only for King’s best ideas, but his best writing – and a story that pulled you in, irrespective of genre.
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