You can group the books about Stephen King into three basic categories. You’ve got the heavy hitters, the ones that look at King from a literary perspective (often these can feel impenetrable, but for the scholarly yet accessible work of people like Michael R. Collings).
kevin quigley
10/29/2012 - 6:30pm
09/17/2012 - 5:00pm
Bram Stoker Award nominee (Best First Novel, 'Less Than Human') Gary Raisor's fascinating new graphic novella, Empty Places, finds much to plumb from that single sentence. Narrated from the point of view of an unnamed homeless man, the trenchant themes of home and the journey to find it are all that more resonant.
08/29/2012 - 8:00pm
You don't know what to expect when you see a title like this one. Stephen King certainly hasn't been shy about unusual titles in the past
08/27/2012 - 1:00pm
The news that Stephen King would not be publishing a new book in the fall/winter of 2012 was met with some dismay. This isn’t entirely fans’ fault, with their high expectatio
08/03/2012 - 1:00pm
Peter Straub’s The Buffalo Hunter is a strange, engrossing, singular work. Like much of Straub’s longer fiction, it horrifies almost indirectly, menacing the reader with a sense of dread rather
07/12/2012 - 11:12am
The cover of the new Esquire magazine – bright yellow, and featuring Jeremy Renner – heralds the conclusion of the Stephen King/Joe Hill story, “In the Tall Grass,” with this tagline: &ld
06/03/2012 - 12:16am

05/07/2012 - 5:32am
04/24/2012 - 5:17pm






