Stephen King Fans discussion
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What was your first Stephen King book?






You may not like them all the time, but they are real. And, like a mooching family member, you love them anyway. ;)

Yep. And apparently my brother, too! ;)



I thought Thinner was a really excellent book. In my opinion it was the one Bachman book that really seemed more like a Stephen King. And the movie sticks completely to the original book, they did an excellent job.



I worked at Barnes and Noble one year for Christmas. I also browsed books.. it was fun. Until the day after Thanksgiving. That placed was packed! And they don't discount anything~!




James, Skeleton Crew was first published in 1985.
My first was The Stand...what a way to start it all, eh? I went from that to 'Salem's Lot and Firestarter, then grabbed the rest (this was during the 80s) one by one and read them all.....I think Pet Semetary was his "new" book at the time....
Rob wrote: "I think Firestarter was his "new" book when I started reading him. I believe that was about 5th grade. Way to date myself, huh?"
I guess that makes us the old men of the group, eh?
I guess that makes us the old men of the group, eh?
ok...so we can all sit on the porch and drink lemonade while we remember the good ole days....
but if I see little bald men running around, i'm outta here!
but if I see little bald men running around, i'm outta here!
Hey I just googled the word youngin to come up with something snazzy to say and that urban dictionary came up! Google's fault!

but if I see little bald men running around, i'm outta here!"
To quote the great rock group Presidents of the United States of America, "Old man on the back porch old man on the back porch
Old man on the back porch and that old man is me"
I started reading King my sophomore year in high school (Shining) but he had been around quite some time before then.

The Shining was my very first ... I was 8 or 9 ... My sister and I were supposed to be asleep in the backseat while my parents watched the movie at the drive in ... but we weren't!
the next day i snuck it down off the shelf and started reading it ... i got sprung though because i had a few nightmares - and the book was taken away ... but not after i'd gotten about two thirds the way through ...
been addicted ever since ... no one do the math ok - i don't wanna know how long

potatoe peelers?
now we don't have snow here in Australia - but when I was a kid the closest book shop was a 3 day walk across the desert - and the last day was through drop bear infested terrain

"
nice boyfriend :)

now where can i find me one of them then?

Lately I've decided to listen to more audiobooks, even if I own the book, so he's currently downloading for me:
Rage - Apparently you can find this in audiobook form even though it's no longer in print (He's using Soulseek if you guys wanna know)
Lisey's Story - I own the book, but I figure I can listen while I drive
Christine - the only one of King's older stuff that I haven't read and don't own.
The Long Walk & The Running Man - I own both, but this would be perfect for if one of these wins for May.
I've also requested: On Writing and Danse Macabre.

Blaze is a good one to listen to as well. The same man reads that, that read Stationary Bike. Great, gravelly voice.


I cannot remember but I think it was IT and the first stephen king book I owned was Hearts in Atlantis and the collection of his books grew from there.




We had to get up half an hour before we went to bed and then crawl all the way to town and then lick store clean before we were allowed to even touch the cover of the books!
deleted user wrote: "Why, back in MY day, we had to walk 15 miles in the snow, barefoot, with potato peelers stuck in our ears to get the latest Stephen king book!
"
Needful Things was my first book.
I was 11, it was summer, and I was at the library. I remember thinking it was the thickest book I had ever seen. I was so proud of myself when I finished that book and was hooked on Stephen King.
I was a fan of horror prior to that book. I read Poe, and Lovecraft, which went over my head. And of course Christopher Pike, which remains a guilty pleasure even now.
But there was something about the works of "Uncle Stevie" that drew me back again and again.
I was 11, it was summer, and I was at the library. I remember thinking it was the thickest book I had ever seen. I was so proud of myself when I finished that book and was hooked on Stephen King.
I was a fan of horror prior to that book. I read Poe, and Lovecraft, which went over my head. And of course Christopher Pike, which remains a guilty pleasure even now.
But there was something about the works of "Uncle Stevie" that drew me back again and again.

Books mentioned in this topic
Nightmares and Dreamscapes (other topics)The Long Walk (other topics)
The Mist (other topics)
The Eyes of the Dragon (other topics)
Christine (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Stephen King (other topics)Kurt Vonnegut Jr. (other topics)
Ray Bradbury (other topics)
It was either that or Pet Sematary which was also on the bookshelf, that scared the proverbial out of me.
Been an avid fan ever since.