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Stephen King

American · b. 1947

32 books reviewed Avg rating 4.3 / 5Top rating 4.8 / 5

National Book Award for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters; Bram Stoker Award (multiple); World Fantasy Award

Stephen King is an American author whose prodigious output — including The Shining, It, Misery, and Carrie — has made him the defining figure in modern horror fiction.

Stephen King has published over sixty novels and nearly two hundred short stories since Carrie appeared in 1974, making him not merely prolific but sustainably prolific — maintaining a readership across five decades and multiple generations. His subject is broadly fear: fear of the dark, of the monster, of disease, of time, of isolation, of the violence that ordinary people are capable of. But what distinguishes his best work from genre routine is his understanding of character and community. King’s protagonists feel like real people because they are located in specific social worlds — small-town Maine, working-class families, professional lives — and the horror he introduces is effective precisely because it threatens something the reader has come to care about.

Carrie (1974), The Shining (1977), The Stand (1978), It (1986), and Misery (1987) are the core of his canonical achievement, each demonstrating different facets of his range. The Shining is a genuinely terrifying psychological horror novel about alcoholism, family violence, and spiritual malevolence. It is his most sustained and ambitious creation: a thousand-page novel about a group of children confronting an ancient evil in Derry, Maine, that works both as coming-of-age story and cosmic horror. Misery, the most tightly constructed of his major novels, is as much a meditation on authorship and the relationship between writer and reader as it is a thriller. On Writing (2000), part memoir and part craft manual, is one of the best books about the writing process by any author.

King’s weaknesses are real: he can be too long, his endings have disappointed many readers (the It ending is the canonical example), and his enormous output includes books that feel underprepared. His critical reputation long lagged behind his popularity, though the National Book Award for Distinguished Contribution (2003) represented a meaningful institutional recognition. For readers approaching him for the first time, The Shining, Misery, or Different Seasons (a collection of novellas including the stories that became Stand by Me and The Shawshank Redemption) are excellent starting points.


Reading Guides

32 Books Reviewed

The Green Mile book cover
Bestseller

The Green Mile

by Stephen King

4.6

A death row corrections officer in 1930s Louisiana encounters a gentle giant with miraculous healing powers awaiting execution for a crime he may not have committed.

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11/22/63 book cover
Bestseller

11/22/63

by Stephen King

4.5

A high school teacher travels back to 1958 through a time portal with a mission to prevent the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

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The Drawing of the Three book cover
4.5

Roland the Gunslinger, wounded and feverish on a beach between worlds, must draw three companions from our world through mysterious doors: Eddie Dean, a heroin addict from 1987 New York; Odetta Holmes, a woman with a fractured personality; and Jack Mort, a serial killer whose removal from his world has unforeseen consequences.

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The Waste Lands book cover

The Waste Lands

by Stephen King

4.5

Roland's ka-tet journeys through a decaying post-apocalyptic landscape toward the city of Lud, where a murderous computer named Blaine the Mono issues riddles to all who would ride him out of the dying city. Jake Chambers returns to the group, but his paradoxical existence threatens to destroy Roland's mind.

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Wizard and Glass book cover

Wizard and Glass

by Stephen King

4.5

After resolving the Blaine cliffhanger, Roland tells his ka-tet the story of his first quest at fourteen: his love affair with Susan Delgado in the town of Hambry, and the betrayal that shaped everything he became. A 600-page flashback that is simultaneously the longest and most essential Dark Tower novel.

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The Shining book cover
Bestseller

The Shining

by Stephen King

4.5

A recovering alcoholic writer takes a winter caretaker job at a remote Colorado hotel where the building's evil history begins to consume his sanity and endanger his family.

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The Stand book cover
Bestseller

The Stand

by Stephen King

4.5

A superflu kills 99% of the human population, and the survivors are drawn into a final confrontation between the forces of good and evil across the ruins of America.

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It book cover
Bestseller

It

by Stephen King

4.4

Seven children in a small Maine town band together to fight an ancient evil that preys on their fears — and are called back as adults to finish what they started.

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Misery book cover
Bestseller

Misery

by Stephen King

4.4

A bestselling novelist is nursed back to health by his self-proclaimed number one fan after a car accident, and discovers that his rescue has become his captivity.

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Salem's Lot book cover

Salem's Lot

by Stephen King

4.3

Writer Ben Mears returns to the small Maine town of Jerusalem's Lot to write a novel — and finds the town slowly dying. A vampire has taken up residence in the Marsten House, and the townspeople are becoming the undead one by one. King's second novel remains one of horror fiction's definitive vampire stories.

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The Dark Tower book cover

The Dark Tower

by Stephen King

4.3

Roland Deschain reaches the Dark Tower at last. Every thread of the series converges: the Crimson King rages on the Tower's balcony, the Beams must be defended, Patrick Danville's strange gift is the key to everything, and the fates of every character in the ka-tet are decided. King includes a foreword warning readers that the destination may not be what they expect — a warning that has generated debate ever since.

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The Dead Zone book cover

The Dead Zone

by Stephen King

4.3

Johnny Smith wakes from a four-year coma to discover he has psychic powers — a touch reveals things about people and events. When he shakes the hand of a rising politician and sees a future of nuclear catastrophe, Johnny faces the most impossible moral question: is it right to kill one person to prevent mass destruction?

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The Institute book cover

The Institute

by Stephen King

4.3

Children with telekinetic and telepathic abilities are abducted from their homes and taken to a facility in rural Maine called The Institute, where their gifts are exploited for purposes they cannot initially understand. Twelve-year-old Luke Ellis, gifted beyond any previous subject, becomes the unlikely center of a resistance.

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The Outsider book cover
Bestseller

The Outsider

by Stephen King

4.3

A seemingly airtight case against a beloved teacher accused of murder begins to unravel when impossible evidence suggests someone — or something — else was responsible.

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Carrie book cover
Bestseller

Carrie

by Stephen King

4.2

A telekinetic teenage girl pushed to the breaking point by her fanatical mother and bullying classmates unleashes catastrophic revenge on her entire town.

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Doctor Sleep book cover
Bestseller

Doctor Sleep

by Stephen King

4.2

A middle-aged Danny Torrance, now a hospice worker battling alcoholism, must protect a young girl with extraordinary psychic powers from a tribe of psychic vampires.

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Needful Things book cover
Bestseller

Needful Things

by Stephen King

4.2

A mysterious new shop opens in Castle Rock, Maine — and its proprietor offers every customer exactly what they desire, at a price that will destroy the town.

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Night Shift book cover
Bestseller

Night Shift

by Stephen King

4.2

Stephen King's first published short story collection, gathering twenty tales of horror ranging from killer trucks and sentient machinery to possessed children and predatory creatures.

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The Wind Through the Keyhole book cover
4.2

Set between Wizard and Glass and Wolves of the Calla, the ka-tet takes shelter from a deadly storm called a starkblast. As they wait, Roland tells a story from his early days as a gunslinger, within which young Roland tells a fairy tale to a frightened boy. Three nested narratives — frame, memory, and fable — make this the series' most structurally playful and tonally gentle entry.

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Wolves of the Calla book cover

Wolves of the Calla

by Stephen King

4.2

Roland and his ka-tet arrive at Calla Bryn Sturgis, a farming village terrorised by the Wolves — armoured riders who sweep in every generation to steal one child from every pair of twins, returning them as 'roont' adults, permanently diminished. King structures the novel as a western, drawing directly on The Magnificent Seven, as the gunslingers agree to help the Calla defend itself.

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Firestarter book cover

Firestarter

by Stephen King

4.1

Andy McGee and his eight-year-old daughter Charlie are on the run from a shadowy government agency called The Shop after years of experiments have left Charlie with pyrokinetic abilities she can barely control. The more frightened Charlie becomes, the larger and less predictable her fires.

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The Running Man book cover

The Running Man

by Stephen King writing as Richard Bachman

4.1

In a brutal near-future America, desperate man Ben Richards enters a televised game show where contestants are hunted across the country and killed for entertainment — and prize money his family cannot survive without.

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Cujo book cover

Cujo

by Stephen King

4.0

A friendly St. Bernard contracts rabies and traps a mother and her young son inside a broken-down car on a sweltering summer day in rural Maine. With no supernatural element, King strips horror down to its barest components: an animal, heat, thirst, and time running out.

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Song of Susannah book cover

Song of Susannah

by Stephen King

4.0

The ka-tet fractures across time and world: Susannah is drawn to New York, 1999, carrying a demonic child that may doom or save the Tower; Roland and Eddie travel to Maine, 1977, where they must obtain the land for a vacant lot and encounter a young writer named Stephen King working on a novel called The Gunslinger. The meta-fictional stakes escalate dramatically.

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Under the Dome book cover

Under the Dome

by Stephen King

4.0

An invisible, impenetrable dome descends without warning on the small town of Chester's Mill, Maine, sealing it off from the outside world. As resources dwindle and communication with the exterior becomes impossible, the town's worst political instincts emerge with terrifying speed.

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Thinner book cover

Thinner

by Stephen King writing as Richard Bachman

3.9

A morbidly obese lawyer accidentally kills an old Romani woman with his car and receives a single word from her ancient father — 'thinner' — triggering an unstoppable supernatural curse that begins to consume him.

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Reading Guides & Lists

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best Stephen King book to start with?

For horror, start with The Shining (1977) or It (1986). For accessible King that works for non-horror readers, try Misery (1987) or On Writing (2000). Carrie (1974) is his shortest novel and a good test of your horror tolerance.

How many books has Stephen King written?

Stephen King has published over 65 novels and nearly 200 short stories, many under the pseudonym Richard Bachman. His output spans horror, thriller, science fiction, and literary fiction.

Are Stephen King books connected?

Many King novels share the fictional Maine towns of Castle Rock and Derry, and several connect through The Dark Tower series. However, each book works as a standalone — you do not need to have read other King novels to understand any individual one.

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