If you’re regular visitor to this blog then you’ll know how much I like Stephen King as a writer. I think he is a master storyteller who’s work will still be messing with the minds of readers way into the future. Recently, after an evening reading and watching interviews with King, I came to realise that there are so many novel and short stories I’ve yet to read.
I’m ashamed to say that there are the ones like: Firestarter, Christine and The Eyes of the Dragon that I’ve never heard of.
Not to mention the Dark Tower series.
I just never got around to reading it, not with the plethora of other Literature in the ethos. I think I missed these titles because King has been, and still is a prolific writer; with books splattering the high street before I was born and then consistently since (now I’m 32 by the way)
This idea prompted me to think about the more ‘well know titles.’ You know, the ones that scared the hell out of you as a child (well, I was a child) like: Pet Sematary, The Shining, Carrie and Cujo.
Or the ones with the unforgettable characters: Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile and Stand by Me.
As I was thinking this over, it dawned on me that it was the films that I remembered from my childhood and not the King novels. I mean, I read some of them but the novel slash film blurs into one (FYI, it was called Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption and Stand by Me was adapted from a short story called: The Body.)
To add insult to injury I read an interview where King said that out of all his novels, Liseys Story was the one he enjoyed most.
Well, this one must’ve slipped my radar too.
Right. This is no good I thought to myself; I’m going to read, or re-read a selection of King novels, as I don’t really know him as a writer. The film adaptations are the ones etched into my memory. Many of which according to King completely ignore the message of his novels.
Being born in 1982, means that I was -6 when Carrie was published. This was the novella that granted King the freedom to write full time. He certainly did that alright: releasing 54 novels to date, hundreds of short stories and two books on the craft of writing.
So, I’ve been to the second hand bookshops. I came back with: The Stand, Misery, Liseys Story and IT.
That’s the story; for the first half of 2016, I’m going to get Kingafied.
If you have any suggestions or discussion points then get in touch, I’d love to hear from you.


