Stephen King‘sThe Standis an awesomely epic creation. It’s good versus evil writ large across the American landscape. It’s heavy, detailed, and extremely rich in the characterizations of its people and themes. The story is familiar — an apocalyptic virus is accidentally (and inevitably) re...
The language used in the book is very specific to the region of Veracruz where the book is set. While it is a fictional town, my friends from Veracruz confirmed that this is how people talk there and I also can confirm that that is how I’ve heard older relatives talk as well. There...
The Stand by Stephen King is a classic horror novel that has been around for decades. It’s an epic story about the struggle between good and evil after a pandemic wipes out most of humanity. The characters are complex, the plot unpredictable, and readers will be taken on quite a ride ...
Read books written by Stephen King in our e-reader absolutely for free. Author of Insomnia, The Waste Lands, It
Stephen King's epic novel,The Stand, took on a new meaning in 2020 when a real, novel virus, COVID-19, spread throughout the globe, killing millions. While not as severe as King's Superflu, also known as Captain Tripps, which is the apocalyptic pandemic inThe Stand, elements of the ...
Yes, I have read it as nearly all Stephen King´s books, of course I also read all Richard B., books being some of them really very good. For instance The Long Way, one of his best, but also The Running Man with Arnold Schwarzenegger making the movie based in this book. ...
Horror novelist Stephen King has written hundreds of short stories and novels, but there are surprisingly few video games based on his work.
Stephen King’sYou Like It Darkeris a collection of 12 titles—seven previously published short stories and five novellas. Looking back over the table of contents now, those that stand out for me as memorable are the novellas. The book starts with “Two Talented Bastids,” which I appreciate...
Clowns were always creepy, but then Stephen King came along. In 1986, King published “It,” which introduced the world to seven scrappy kids nicknamed The Losers Club, who faced off against a child-killing, shape-shifting clown named Pennywise, an evil entity that was infesting their hometown...
Insomnia and Eyes of the Dragon are among the relatively small list of Stephen King projects that have never made it to screen and are not currently on their way. (Bonus: a roundup of the ones that are indeed on the way.)