Stephen King

Overview

Stephen King is an American author known for his horror, fantasy, and science fiction, though he’s also written in other genres, including a canonical text on the craft of creative writing. King’s works—like “Carrie,” “The Shining,” and “The Green Mile”—have sold millions of copies and have been widely adapted for film and television.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • King has published more than 60 novels

    Since 1974, the writer has published a staggering number of books, often releasing a title a year (and sometimes more than that). This comprehensive list from King’s official website lists everything the man has ever done, including unpublished stories, long-forgotten television specials, and limited edition novels. It’s a fascinating look into the artistic life of one of America’s most successful writers.

  • Stephen King’s wife rescued his first hit from the trash

    In 1972, King began working on a story about a telekinetic high school girl but abandoned the story just a few pages into the first draft. Luckily, his wife, Tabitha, found the manuscript in a trash bin and encouraged him to continue working on it. That story would become King’s first book, “Carrie,” which was published in 1974 and went on to sell millions of copies, establishing King as a household name following Brian De Palma’s 1976 film adaptation.

  • 'Carrie' kick-started a wildly successful career

    King has published more than 60 novels, along with dozens of novellas, hundreds of short stories, several collections of nonfiction, and has sold over 400 million books. This 2024 interview finds him reflecting on his debut novel, and breakthrough hit, “Carrie,” and the wild success that followed.

    Stephen King in his office
    Video

    Stephen King reflects on his iconic career

  • Stephen King is drawn to horror's childish power

    This 1986 appearance promoting King’s directorial debut finds him reflecting on what makes horror, which he says is its ability to strip away pretense, reducing supposedly sophisticated people to terrified children. He also seems to have already soured on the movie business, calling filmmaking “a primitive way to create,” a not-so-subtle dig at Stanley Kubrick’s adaptation of “The Shining,” which notoriously disappointed King.

    Stephen King on a Canadian talk show in 1986
    Video

    Stephen King is drawn to horror's childish power

  • King was outed as Bachman by a bookstore clerk

    King published several books in the 1970s and '80s under the pen name Richard Bachman, a device that allowed him to publish outside the horror genre. Eventually, Bachman was unmasked when a bookshop clerk noticed similarities between the Bachman novel “Thinner” and some of King’s other titles. A 2024 study in the Journal of Computational Literary Studies used quantitative methods to find similarities between works published under Bachman and King, arguing that genuine literary voices are immutable, despite some authors’ efforts.

  • David Foster Wallace admired King's writing

    David Foster Wallace was one of the most acclaimed American writers of the 1990s and early 2000s, releasing dense, philosophically informed works of literary fiction. When the syllabus for an undergraduate literature course he taught surfaced through his archives at the University of Texas, many of his fans were surprised to find it included so much supposedly commercial fiction, including Stephen King’s “Carrie.” Below are his annotations on two pages of the novel.

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