I want to get my dad something by Stephen King for Christmas. Right now he’s halfway through The Stand and I know he has also read On Writing and some short stories.
I’m looking for a book, like The Stand, which is considered to be one of King’s best and is read by people outside the horror genre. As I’ve never read anything by King apart from a few stories, I have no clue which of his books are the most-respected.
Well, for what it’s worth, IT is my favorite King novel.
I’d also highly recommend Four Seasons. It’s a collection of four novellas, including the stories that the movies The Shawshank Redemtion and Stand By Me were based on. Excellent book, and not really horror if you’re trying to stay away from that.
Huh, a lot of people don’t respect anything Stephen King writes, but here’s a few suggestions anyway.
Different Seasons is my guess for the SK book most read by people who don’t usually read horror. This consists of four novellas, including “The Body” which was the basis for the film “Stand By Me” and “Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption.”
IT might be a good choice. If he’s enjoying The Stand, I think IT is somewhat similar in tone. Personally, I find this book to be some of his best writing. I don’t consider it a typical horror book, although it has plenty of scary parts, and draws a lot on 1950s camp horror movie mythology. There’s a lot of nostalgia for smallish town American childhood and coming of age type stuff going on as well.
When I want to hook someone on SK, who sneers at him, I give them Different Seasons (not Four Seasons) as suggested or Gerald’s Game which is a truly creepy book, which will never, ever be made into a Hollywood movie. Minor spoiler: GG doesn’t contain anything supernatural, no monsters, no horrors from beyond. It’s just scary.
I’m amazed no one has mentioned The Green Mile. Great story, great characters, not horror. Wonderful. My husband doesn’t usually like King, but he like TGM, as well as The Dead Zone and The Stand.
Hearts in Atlantis is also a very cool King book… the first two stories (short novels, really) in the book are excellent, the others a bit uneven but still worth reading.
If your Dad likes short stories, Everything’s Eventual has a great variety of different types of King stories in it.
The Talisman with Peter Straub usually ranks high on fan’s lists (right after the Dark Tower series on many people’s minds, but I like Talisman better). But do NOT buy the sequel - Black House was terrible.
I don’t know how other fans feel about it, but I think that Bag Of Bones is his best most recent book. One of his best, period.
Bag of Bones was wonderful. Very wistful.
One thing about King; he’s very good at cescribing/channeling emotions of kids at about age 11-14. Dreamcatcher was horrible for most parts, but the flashbacks to when the main characters were kids were as good as ever. I think that is why It works so well, in spite of being way too long. The Body is another example of that.
In many ways, I wish SK would stop doing horror. He’s got such an incredible talent for describing ordinary people and ordinary lives and when he wanders out of the horror game, he not only comes close to producing literature, he excels. However, as with most video/pc games, the inevitable cheesy endfight with the Big Bad is almost always very unsatisfactory. He always lose the ‘sense of wonder’ he’s created. I mean, is this any kind of mantra to beat the monster?
If it were my dad and he really liked The Stand I’d get The Gunslinger and It. The Gunslinger will start him on the series and if he likes it he can get the rest later and in my mind The Stand just naturally leads to the Dark Tower series. But by getting him It too, you’re covered in case the Gunslinger puts him off. I was a bit put off by the Dark Tower series when I first started it because it’s more fantasy. If what he likes about The Stand is the easy-to-relate-to characters and the familiar yet all wrong setting, he will like It for sure, and if I were only going to get one, it would be It, but somehow I feel like The Stand without the Gunslinger is like a spoon without a fork so I’d get both.
(I would be really excited if someone in my family besides me read even one Stephen King book but they’re all snobs.)
Oh my lord yes. One of my all-time favorite stories? “Head Down,” the non-fiction account of his son’s Little League team on the road to the state championship. I didn’t just feel like I was there, I was there.
I loved Gunslinger, but when the main character view point shifted in the later book (those who have read it will understand, hopefully, not in the mood for spoilers), I lost interest, because I wanted to go back to the old way.
Havent finished the book yet. Don’t have the heart, I guess.
Definitely Different Seasons. My personal favorite is The Shining, but it’s a bitch to ever get anyone to read it. It’s always, “Oh, I saw the movie.”:mad: :mad: :mad:
I’ll put in a nod for Delores Claiborne. Again, no horror at all in there.
What I liked about that book is how SK approached the storytelling. It was all told from the viewpoint of Delores Claiborne, in first person. No other characters tell the story: it’s all about Delores. And he does a terrific job telling a story from a woman’s perspective.
Also, two of my favorite lines ever are in this book: (paraphrased below)
“Well, lookit him, just sittin’ there like the High Grand Poobah of Upper Butt Crack.”
That one slays me everytime. And, the classic line, which appears in the movie:
“Sometimes being a bitch is all a woman has to hold on to.”
I agree with elfkin about The Talisman. It’s my absolute favorite King book, and I read everything just about up to Desperation. Eyes of the Dragon is also fabulous, but you have to remember that it’s a fairy tale, not the usual horror story you look to King for. You can never go wrong with It, of course, but for my money, I can read Talisman over and over again. And have.
His short story collections are very good. Everything’s Eventual is his newest one, and there’s everything from a creepy-tell-around-a-campfire story to one where you are scratching your head until the end of the story.
Have him start with Carrie, which was the first one. King has really grown as a writer since that one.