Some Stephen King books |
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essexboyinwales
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Posted: December 03 2021 at 07:03 |
Not a full poll of his works (!) but 8 of his books that I really love. Yes, I know there are many that could be in this list, but it's a personal one! I've not included the Dark Tower series, as it's a different beast, and I'm currently halfway through the final part (having read them in order one after the other over the last couple of years). So, just pick one! I'm going with 11/22/63, which I think is just magnificent, even compared to these heavyweights.
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Shadowyzard
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I don't remember reading The Long Walk among the options. I might have read its Turkish translation ages ago. The Turkish titles were generally not "faithful" to the originals in Turkey. Especially in horror movies and books. They prefer to give "striking", "shocking", "spooky" etc. titles, I think for financial purposes. It worked for me. I was buying the books with creepy titles, hahah.
Hard to pick... I'll go with "IT". |
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rushfan4
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The Stand followed by It. I don't believe that I have read 11/22/63 yet. I used to devour his books when I was younger but I don't read nearly as much as I used to. Once I started working and then hanging out on the internet I only read a few books a year now; usually while on vacation.
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Shadowyzard
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Let me mention the re-translated titles of the SK books in the options here (except for 11/22/63 and The Long Walk).
From English to Turkish to English: IT = O = IT (This remained the same, and the title is already intriguing and a little creepy per se.) The Stand = Mahşer = Armageddon / The Judgment Day The Green Mile = Yeşil Yol = The Green Road (This title is quite similar, but this one is not one of the earlier SK books. We used to give false titles in the past more oftenly.) The Tommyknockers = Şeffaf = Transparent (Well, "Şeffaf" is sort of intriguing, but is also weird for a horror book.) Needful Things = Ruhlar Dükkanı = The Shop of Souls (The Shop of Souls sounds lame in English, but Ruhlar Dükkanı sounds awesome in Turkish.) Misery = Sadist = Sadist (Sadist is sadist in Turkish too.) Edited by Shadowyzard - December 03 2021 at 07:53 |
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enigmatic
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My Top pick is 11/22/63.
Masterly written book, ultimate time travel novel. Edited by enigmatic - December 04 2021 at 09:57 |
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Machinemessiah
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Hard between The Stand and 11/22/63 for me. The Stand read it in my teens or early twenties and it blew me away! remained in my all-time hall of fame.. for me, it predated (and bettered) all those (great) apocalyptic movies that came later: Epidemia or 28 days later; though it's been long since I read it. 11/22/63 found it reeeaaaally good, read it some 4 years ago; very clever, entertaining and interesting in a maybe more mature sort of way, with the historical edge and all the documentation about it. I'll keep with The Stand though for the fond memory I keep about it, the epic, the scope, and the impact and great times it had upon me back then; it was huge. |
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moshkito
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Hi,
Considering how much and how many books of Gothic Literature I have read and have talked about (including a 2 day class on it!), I have never been enthused with Stephen King and always thought of his work as too much of the Hollywood variety of the Gothic Literature. That's just me, too much literature and of the few books of his I have read, I still thought it felt more like manipulated pulp than really good stories that took you with them.
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Shadowyzard
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 24 2020 Location: Davutlar Status: Offline Points: 4506 |
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^ King stated that he writes "for the audience" and not for "artistic purposes". I'll not bother to find or recall his whole explanation of that.
Even your "that's just me" is coupled with your arrogance and condescending crap. Stephen King is a very imaginative writer. He is one of the best in taking imaginative people with him in his books. I firmly believe so. His style is not great but very fun to read. For me, at least. I've read loads of gothic literature too. I'm also a book translator. Reading does not necessarily correspond to "getting". As far as I've observed (and I'm a good observer), your cognitive faculties are miserable. But, you'll find my comment "sad", as usual. You're either fun or annoying. Generally both at the same time. I take/took Harold Bloom's criticism on Stephen King's "inadequateness" seriously, but you would be the last person to be taken seriously for me, on this forum. By the way, Stephen King is a very smart person with great ethics. Follow him on Twitter. On a second thought, don't. You're the best (!) Actually, everyone should learn everything from you (!) It is a pity that you don't rule the world (!) Edited by Shadowyzard - December 03 2021 at 11:10 |
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omphaloskepsis
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I've read them all.
It > The Stand > The Long Walk Needful Things >11/22/63> The Tommyknockers Misery > The Green Mile Unlike most King fans, I quite like The Tommyknockers. Many of King's novels contain autobiographical elements. On the a deeper level, The Tommyknockers is a novel of addiction.
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Shadowyzard
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^ I liked The Tommyknockers a lot too. But I only read its Turkish translation (Şeffaf) when I was a teenager. All in all, the fact that I still remember its plot and some of its parts vividly should come to mean that I was impacted by it profoundly.
Edited by Shadowyzard - December 03 2021 at 22:41 |
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Sean Trane
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The OP's list poll is mainly books from his second litterary life.... That +/- means once I got tired of his crud and dropped it all. From this list, The Stand is the only one I read (It is the one book that really made me gave up) Before that I'd read almost everything until roughly +/- 83/4 or so at the time or release (well Salem & Carrie, a bit after). faves: Shining, Stand, Different Seasons, Christine and Nightshift. |
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let's just stay above the moral melee
prefer the sink to the gutter keep our sand-castle virtues content to be a doer as well as a thinker, prefer lifting our pen rather than un-sheath our sword |
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Shadowyzard
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^ IT could indeed be unpleasant or bland for a young adult or adult. One of my high-school teachers was intrigued when I told her about it, and she was frustrated and couldn't finish reading it as a King fan.
I think, Desperation is one of King's "later" books that can be amusing for adults. Actually some of his other books till the new millennium can be fun to read too. You cannot know before reading!!! My favourite King "thing" is The Dark Tower series. Aside from that, I can count about 15-20 of his books that I enjoyed immensely. Salem's Lot was incredible!!! The first one that sprang to my mind. Admittedly, I'm not "following" his stuff that eagerly anymore. But I may compensate for it later in my life. Edited by Shadowyzard - December 04 2021 at 03:09 |
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JD
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In my youth I was a huge King fan. My favourite was the Shining (missing from your list). But The Stand is easily a close second. I still think the original TV mini-series with Gary Sinise and Molly Ringwald was a great adaptation for its time.
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BaldJean
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I only read "Needful Things" so far and really liked it until the bloodbath at the end which in my opinion was totally unnecessary and ruined the book for me. this very disappointing end made me avoid him. it is not that I am generally against bloodbaths; "Die andere Seite" ("The Other Side") by Alfred Kubin has a much bigger bloodbath at the end. but with Kubin the bloodbath made sense; with King it did in my opinion not. there are so many ways these people could have made each others lives living hell that I don't see the point in all these killings
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rushfan4
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Agreed. I really enjoyed the original TV mini-series. I haven't seen the new one yet.
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omphaloskepsis
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I agree. The ending was the only part of Needful Things that pained me. King's endings may be his Achilles Heel. The Lion's share of King's early novels end in FIRE!
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dr wu23
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The Stand from that list but The Dark Tower (Gunslinger) series is the best of the King books for me.
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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
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Zeph
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Hmm. I always find it difficult to rank things I like. I’ve read most of King’s novels. My first encounter was The Gunslinger, which ended with reading the entire series, and I fell in love with his stories and writing. I read a few more books before deciding to start from the beginning with Carrie and working my way through is catalogue chronologically. One reason being that there are recurring characters and themes, often not in a big way, but enough to make his works feel like a big picture where some stories overlap or characters moving across different stories. By my count, I’ve read more than fifty of his books. Most novels and a few others.
The poll has several great books. I’ll narrow it down to It, The Stand, 11/22/63, The Long Walk and Misery. The first two books are epics, but I think The Stand edges out It. The JFK book took me by surprise and was very enjoyable to read, as something different from his usual style. The Long Walk and Misery are books which deal with a very specific circumstance and King brilliantly delve into these. Misery is almost claustrophobic as you keep reading about events that pass mainly in that room. Riveting stuff. The Long Walk dealt with various fascinating human traits and psychological challenges in another grueling story. I remember being very taken by that book. Out of no short-comings of the others, I have to say The Stand, which is such a monster of a book and multiple journeys beautifully intervowen. The size and overall theme of the book makes it difficult to challenge by his other works. |
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essexboyinwales
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Thanks for your responses. The problem is that he has written so many, I can't remember how I felt about some of them! These 8 stand out to me, I just know I loved them. The Long Walk is a brutal brutal book, probably the most chilling for me. It would be between that, The Stand and It for me for 2nd place. Or maybe The Green Mile...... Such a fantastic author!! So many I want to read again.....
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Zeph
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The nice thing about books you don’t remember is that you can read them again. It won’t be an all new experience, but with a decade or more between, a lot must have been forgotten. I just finished Bag of Bones for the second time. I had some suspicions at the start, but managed to read 1/4 of the book before realizing I’d read it before.
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