Stickler
Well-Known Member
Really "The Stand" and maybe "The Shining" and "The Dead Zone" are probably his best. He worked into a formula in other books that he follows somewhat that make a lot of his other books kinda cookie cutter. But IMHO King really shines in his short works (stories, novella, etc.). His story collections are spine-tinglingly scary and often full of wonder and amazement. Something he has difficulty catching in his books anymore. I think he got too caught up in placing ALL of his works into his "Dark Tower" universe and some them (and we readers) suffered for it.
BTW, am I the only one who threw the last Dark Tower book across the room in disgust for the crappy and fake way he neatly tied up all the loose ends, neutered the otherwise very scary and mysterious bad guy (The Crimson King) and then ended it with a horrible cliche cop-out?
I am nervous about finishing the Dark Tower series. I will eventually, but I'm taking my time. My favorite Stephen King book is "It," though I acknowledge the possibility that it's mostly for sentimental reasons. I read it when I was 13, only a year or two older than the characters, and living in a town that (to me) looked and felt eerily and exactly like Derry, Maine. I was transported into that world and I could imagine very strongly being one of the friends in the story.
The Stand is a great novel. The Dead Zone is, too.