Klassikercheck: Stephen King: “It”

At 1,400 pages, this is a massive novel – and a huge achievement by a writer showing off all of his storytelling skills. It is one of King’s most enduring novels; it’s crossed over from just being read by his fans, and become a part of a wider cultural consciousness.

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Klassikercheck: Stephen King: “Thinner”

By 1984, everything that Stephen King wrote was selling by the truckload. He couldn’t put a foot wrong: bestseller begat bestseller. But he was writing faster than publishers could cope with.

Artikel: Rereading Stephen King: week nine: “Firestarter”

Charlie McGee is a little girl in the grand, early-King tradition of “kids with special powers”. Hers is pyrokinesis, and was triggered by some shady drug experiments committed on her parents by an even-more-shady governmental organisation known as The Shop.

Artikel: Rereading Stephen King: Week eight: “The Dead Zone”

“The Dead Zone” was the strangest experience of James Smythe’s rereading experiment thus far. It’s the first book that is totally different to his memories of it; to the point where he even doubted that he had read it, and hadn’t just watched the movie adaptation too much.

Artikel: Rereading Stephen King: week seven: “The Long Walk”

Stephen King devotee James Smythe retakes “The Long Walk” in his survey of the horror master, and finds King’s earliest book, written when he was just 18, as powerful today as it was in 1979.

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Klassikercheck: Stephen King: “The Stand”

Stephen King fan James Smythe has reached “The Stand” (the original version was published in 1978) in his survey of the horror master, and finds this novel isn’t just about good versus evil – it’s also about fate.

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Rezension: Stephen King: “Night Shift”

Stephen King uber-fan James Smythe is rereading the works of the horror genius in chronological order. This week, he tackles “Night Shift”, King’s first compilation of short stories, in which he laid the foundations for some of his greatest work

Artikel: Rereading Stephen King: week four: “Rage”

Stephen King enthusiast James Smythe is rereading the horror master’s works in chronological order. This week, King’s only book no longer in print, after apparently influencing a killer.

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Rezension: Stephen King: “Carrie”

Rereading Stephen King: week one – “Carrie”: James Smythe has read everything Stephen King has ever written – and now he’s revisiting each novel in chronological order. First: a young girl with some dangerous powers.

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