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Stephen King

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Stephen King
File:Skheadshot.jpg
BornSeptember 21, 1947
Portland, Maine
Occupationnovelist, short story writer
GenreHorror, Fantasy, Science fiction
Website
http://www.stephenking.com/

Stephen Edwin King (born September 21, 1947) is an American author best known for his enormously popular horror novels. King was the 2003 recipient of The National Book Foundation's Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters.

King's stories frequently involve an unremarkable protagonist such as a middle-class family, a child, or many times, a writer. The characters are involved in their everyday lives, but the supernatural encounters and extraordinary circumstances escalate over the course of the story. King evinces a thorough knowledge of the horror genre, as shown in his nonfiction book Danse Macabre, which chronicles several decades of notable works in both literature and cinema. He also writes stories outside the horror genre, including the novellas The Body and Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption (adapted as the movies Stand By Me and The Shawshank Redemption, respectively), as well as The Green Mile and Hearts in Atlantis.

Stephen King also wrote under the pen name of Richard Bachman.

Biography

Stephen King was born in 1947 in Portland, Maine and is of Scots-Irish ancestry. When King was two years old, his father deserted his family. His mother, Nellie Ruth Pillsbury King, raised King and his adopted older brother David by herself, sometimes under great financial strain. The family moved to Ruth's home town of Durham, Maine but also spent brief periods in Fort Wayne, Indiana and Stratford, Connecticut. King attended Durham Elementary School and Lisbon High School. He grew to stand 6'4" tall.

King has been writing since an early age. When in school, he wrote stories based on movies he had seen recently and sold them to his friends. This was not popular among his teachers, and he was forced to return his profits when this was discovered. The stories were copied using a mimeo machine that his brother David used to copy a newspaper, "Dave's Rag," which he self-published. "Dave's Rag" was about local events, and King would often contribute. At around the age of thirteen, King discovered a box of his father's old books at his aunt's house, mainly horror and science fiction. He was immediately hooked on these genres.

From 1966 to 1971, King studied English at the University of Maine at Orono, Maine. At the university, he wrote a column titled "King's Garbage Truck" in the university magazine. He also met Tabitha Spruce; they married in 1971. King took on odd jobs to pay for his studies, including one at an industrial laundry. He used the experience to write the short story The Mangler. The campus period in his life is readily evident in the second part of Hearts in Atlantis.

After finishing his university studies with a Bachelor of Arts in English and obtaining a certificate to teach high school, King taught English at Hampden Academy in Hampden, Maine. During this time, he and his family lived in a trailer. He wrote short stories (most were published in men's magazines) to help make ends meet. As told in the introduction in Carrie, if one of his kids got a cold, Tabitha would joke, "Come on, Steve, think of a monster". King also developed a drinking problem which stayed with him for over a decade.

During this period, King began a number of novels. One of his first ideas was of a young girl with psychic powers. However, he grew discouraged, and threw it into the trash. Tabitha later rescued it and encouraged him to finish it. After completing the novel, he titled it Carrie, sent it to Doubleday, and more or less forgot about it. Later, he received an offer to buy it with a $2,500 advance (not a large advance for a novel, even at that time). Shortly after, the value of Carrie was realized with the paperback rights being sold for $400,000 (with $200,000 of it going to the publisher). Shortly after its release, his mother died of uterine cancer. He had the novel read to her before she died.

In On Writing, King admits that at this time he was consistently drunk and that he was an alcoholic for well over a decade. He even admits that he was drunk during his mother’s funeral while delivering the eulogy. He states that he had based the alcoholic father in The Shining on himself, though he did not admit it (even to himself) for several years.

Shortly after the publication of The Tommyknockers, King's family and friends finally intervened, dumping his trash on the rug in front of him to show him the evidence of his own addictions: beer cans, cigarette butts, grams of cocaine, Xanax, Valium, NyQuil, dextromethorphan (cough medicine), and marijuana. He sought help and quit all forms of drugs and alcohol in the late 1980's, and has remained sober.

Family

Stephen King lives in Bangor, Maine with his wife Tabitha King, who is also a novelist. They also own a house in the Western Lakes District of Maine. He spends winter seasons in an oceanfront mansion located off the Gulf of Mexico in Sarasota, Florida. Their three children, Naomi Rachel, Joe Hill (who appeared in the film Creepshow), and Owen Phillip, are grown and living on their own. Owen's first collection of stories, We're All in This Together: A Novella and Stories was published in 2005.

Car accident

In the summer of 1999, King was in the middle of writing On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft. At the time, he had finished the memoir section and had abandoned the book for nearly eighteen months, unsure of how to proceed or whether to bother. King reports that it was the first book that he'd abandoned since writing The Stand decades earlier. He had just decided to continue the book. On June 17, he had written up a list of questions that he was frequently asked about writing, as well as some that he wished he would be asked about it; on June 18, he had written four pages of the section on writing.

On June 19, about 4:30 PM, he was walking on the right shoulder of Route 5 in North Lovell. Driver Bryan Smith, distracted by an unrestrained Rottweiler, named Bullet, moving in the back of his 1985 Dodge Caravan, struck King, who landed in a depression about 14 feet (4 meters) from the pavement of Route 5.

Oxford County Sheriff's deputy Matt Baker recorded that witnesses said the driver was not speeding or reckless.[1] Baker also reported that King was struck from behind. King's official website, however, states that this was incorrect, and that King was walking facing traffic. In any case, Smith was turned and leaning to the rear of his vehicle trying to restrain his dog, and was not watching the road when he struck King.

King was conscious enough to give the deputy phone numbers to contact his family, but in considerable pain. The author was first transported to Northern Cumberland Hospital and then flown by helicopter to Central Maine Hospital. His injuries — a collapsed right lung, multiple fractures of the right leg, scalp laceration, and a broken hip — kept him in Central Maine Medical Center until July 9, almost three weeks later.

Earlier that year King had finished most of From a Buick 8, a novel where one of the characters dies in an automobile accident. Of the eerie similarities, King says that he tries "not to make too much of it." Certainly car accidents and their horrors had figured into King's work before. His 1987 novel Misery also concerned a writer who experiences severe injuries in an auto accident, and auto wrecks figure prominently in The Dead Zone and Thinner.

After five operations in ten days and physical therapy, King resumed work on On Writing in July, though his hip was still shattered and he could only sit for about forty minutes before the pain became intolerable.

King's lawyer and two others purchased Smith's van for $1,500, reportedly to avoid it appearing on eBay. Smith, a disabled construction worker, died in his sleep on September 21, 2000 (King's Birthday) at the age of 43.

Template:Spoiler-about King incorporated his accident into the final novel of his Dark Tower series, in which the hero Roland Deschain and his ka-tet try to stop King from being fatally injured by the van. In the story, Roland hypnotized both King and the driver in order to make them forget his appearance.

The novel Dreamcatcher, which was released after King's accident, features a character recovering from a car accident. The series premiere of Stephen King's Kingdom Hospital involved the main character, a painter out for a morning run, being hit by a pickup truck, and was also inspired by the accident. In fact the scene was depicted remarkably similar to how he described his real accident occurring, the only exception being that the driver in the show was driving drunk in addition to trying to restrain his dog. Template:Endspoiler

Writing style

In King's nonfiction book, On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft, King discusses his writing style at great length and depth. King believes that, generally speaking, good stories cannot be called consciously and should not be plotted out beforehand but are better served by focusing on a single "seed" of a story and letting the story grow itself from there. King often begins a story with no idea how the story will end. He mentions in the Dark Tower series that, halfway through its lengthy, nearly 30-year writing period, King received a letter from a woman with cancer who asked how the book would end¹, because she was unlikely to live long enough to read it. He stated that he didn't know. King believes strongly in this style, stating that his best writing comes from freewriting.

He is known for his great eye for detail, for continuity, and for inside references; many stories that may seem unrelated are often linked by secondary characters, fictional towns, or off-hand references to events in previous books. Read as a whole, King's work (which he claims is centered around his Dark Tower magnum opus) creates a remarkable history that stretches from present day all the way back to the beginning of time (with a unique creation myth).

King's books are filled with references to American history and American culture, particularly the darker, more fearful side of these. These references are generally spun into the stories of characters, often explaining their fears. Recurrent references include crime, war (especially the Vietnam War), and racism.

King is also known for his folksy, informal narration, often referring to his fans as "Constant Readers" or "friends and thee neighbors." This familiar style contrasts with the horrific content of many of his stories.

King has a very simple formula for learning to write well: "Read four hours a day and write four hours a day. If you cannot find the time for that, you can't expect to become a good writer."

King also has a simple definition for talent in writing: "If you wrote something for which someone sent you a check, if you cashed the check and it didn't bounce, and if you then paid the light bill with the money, I consider you talented" (from "Everything You Need to Know About Writing Successfuly — in Ten Minutes").

Shortly after his accident, King wrote the first draft of the book Dreamcatcher with a notebook and a Waterman fountain pen, "the world's finest word processor."

King's recent years

In 1996, King won an O. Henry Award for his short story, "The Man in the Black Suit." In 2003, King was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award by the National Book Awards. There was an uproar in the literary community over the choice of King.

"He is a man who writes what used to be called penny dreadfuls. That they could believe that there is any literary value there or any aesthetic accomplishment or signs of an inventive human intelligence is simply a testimony to their own idiocy" — literary critic Harold Bloom.

Others in the writing community expressed their contempt of the slight towards King. Orson Scott Card wrote "Let me assure you that King's work most definitely is literature, because it was written to be published and is read with admiration. What [Richard] Snyder [former CEO of Simon & Schuster, who described King's work as non-literature] really means is that it is not the literature preferred by the academic-literary elite."[2].

King also wrote one short story, The Fifth Quarter, under the name John Swithen. The Fifth Quarter, was reprinted in King's collection Nightmares & Dreamscapes in 1993 under his own name.

King used to play guitar in the band Rock Bottom Remainders but has not joined them on stage for some years. The band's members include: Dave Barry; Ridley Pearson; Scott Turow; Amy Tan; James McBride; Mitch Albom; Roy Blount Jr.; Matt Groening; Kathi Kamen Goldmark; and Greg Iles.

In 2002, King announced he would stop writing, apparently motivated in part by frustration with his injuries, which had made sitting uncomfortable, and reduced his stamina. He has since written several books.

"I'm writing but I'm writing at a much slower pace than previously and I think that if I come up with something really, really good, I would be perfectly willing to publish it because that still feels like the final act of the creative process, publishing it so people can read it and you can get feedback and people can talk about it with each other and with you, the writer, but the force of my invention has slowed down a lot over the years and that's as it should be. I'm not a kid of 25 anymore and I'm not a young middle-aged man of 35 anymore — I'm 55 years old and I have grandchildren, two new puppies to house-train and I have a lot of things to do besides writing and that in and of itself is a wonderful thing but writing is still a big, important part of my life and of everyday."[3]

Since 2003, King has provided his take on pop culture in a column appearing on the back page of Entertainment Weekly, usually every third week. The column is called "The Pop Of King", a reference to "The King of Pop", Michael Jackson.

In October 2005, King has signed up with Marvel Comics; this will be his first time writing original material for the comic book medium other than two pages in a benefit comic for African hunger relief in the 1980s. The 31 issue series will see him adapting and expanding his The Dark Tower series. The series will be illustrated by Eisner Award-winning artist Jae Lee. Marvel recently announced the series was delayed until 2007 in order for King to give it the attention it deserves.

In January 2006, King appeared on the first installment of "Amazon Fishbowl", a live web-program hosted by Bill Maher.

In January 2006, King participated in the Writers in Paradise program at Eckerd College, St. Petersburg, FL.

On August 1 and August 2, 2006, Stephen King will be doing a reading for his charity at Radio City Music Hall alongside J.K. Rowling and John Irving.

It is also reported on his website that he will be having book signings in the New York City area and the West coast sometime in October with the release of his new novel, Lisey's Story.

Baseball

Stephen King is a lifelong fan of the Boston Red Sox, and is frequently found at both home and away baseball games.

In his private role as father, King helped coach his son Owen's Bangor West team to the Maine Little League Championship in 1989. This experience is recounted in the New Yorker essay Head Down, which also appears in the collection Nightmares and Dreamscapes. King has called Head Down his best piece of nonfiction writing.

In 1999 King wrote The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon, which involved former Red Sox team member Tom Gordon as a major character. King recently co-wrote a book entitled Faithful: Two Diehard Boston Red Sox Fans Chronicle the Historic 2004 Season with Stewart O'Nan. This work recounts the authors' roller coaster reaction to the Red Sox's 2004 season, a season culminating in the Sox winning the 2004 American League Championship Series and World Series.

In 1992, Mansfield Stadium, a Little League ballpark (which also host High School and Senior League games) opened in Bangor, Maine. This facility, nicknamed the Field Of Screams, was made possible through the efforts and donations of King and his wife Tabitha.

Richard Bachman

Richard Bachman's author photo. Photo credit: Claudia Inez Bachman

After publishing many wildly successful novels under his own name, King wanted to know if some of his early works (those written before Carrie) would sell without having his name on them. He also worried that many of the non-horror novels he wanted to write would clash with the expectations of his fans. So he convinced his publisher, Signet Books, to print these novels under a pseudonym. The name "Richard Bachman" was supposedly chosen partly in tribute to crime author Donald E. Westlake's long-running pseudonym Richard Stark, and partly in honour of Bachman Turner Overdrive, a band King was listening to at the time he chose his pen name.

King dedicated all of Bachman's early books to people close to him and worked in obscure references to his own identity. When fans picked up on these clues, not to mention the similarity between the two authors' literary styles, horror fans' and retailers' suspicions were aroused. Still, King steadfastly denied any connection to Bachman, and to throw fans off the trail Bachman's 1984 novel Thinner was dedicated to "Claudia Inez Bachman", supposedly Bachman's wife. There was also a phony author photo of Bachman on the dustjacket, credited to Claudia.

Nevertheless, a persistent bookstore clerk couldn't believe that Bachman and King were not one and the same, and eventually located publisher's records at the Library of Congress naming King as the author of one of Bachman's novels. At that point, the link became undeniable. This led to a press release heralding Bachman's "death" -- supposedly from "cancer of the pseudonym". At the time of the announcement in 1985, King was working on Misery which he had planned to release as a Bachman book.

The Bachman story didn't quite end with Thinner, though. In 1996, Bachman's The Regulators came out, with the publishers claiming the book's manuscript was found among Bachman's leftover papers by his widow. Still, it was obvious from the book's packaging and marketing campaign that it was really written by King. There was a picture of a young King on the inside back cover, and the "also by this author" page listed not only works Bachman was credited with writing, but also works he wrote "as Stephen King". Furthermore, The Regulators was released the same day as the King novel Desperation, and the two novels featured many of the same characters. As well, the two book covers were designed to be placed together to form a single picture.

Around the time of The Regulators' release, King said that there may be another Bachman novel left to be "found". However, no further updates on the state of Bachman's trunk of unpublished works has been issued since that time.

King has taken full ownership of the Bachman name on numerous occasions, such as in the introduction to The Bachman Books: Four Early Novels by Stephen King. This introduction, entitled "Why I Was Bachman", lays bare the whole Bachman/King story in clear, undeniable detail.

King also used the "relationship" between him and Bachman as a concept in his book The Dark Half, a story in which a writer's darker pseudonym takes on a life of its own. King dedicated The Dark Half to "the deceased Richard Bachman".

Richard Bachman appeared in King's Dark Tower series, albeit indirectly. In the third book The Wasteland, the sinister children's book Charlie the Choo Choo is revealed to be written by 'Claudia y Inez Bachman'. The spelling discrepancy of the added 'y' was later explained as a deus ex machina on the part of "The White" (a force of good throughout King's Tower series which works to assist the ka-tet of the gunslinger, Roland) to bring the total total number of letters in her name nineteen, a number prominent in King's series.

Richard Bachman slowly built up a readership despite being published in original paperbacks. Thinner was Bachman's first title to be published in hardback. It sold 28,000 copies before it became widely known that the author was really Stephen King, whereupon sales went up tenfold.

The original editions of the first four Bachman books are now among the world's most sought after original paperback novels, with resale prices in the hundreds of dollars.

The first four Bachman titles were also republished in a single volume as The Bachman Books in 1985. After the Columbine High School massacre, King announced that he would allow Rage to go out of print, fearing that it might inspire similar tragedies. Bachman's other novels are now available in separate volumes.

Quotes

  • "In the vast class of victims there is a subclass: the victims of victims."

-The Stand

  • "Go then; there are other worlds than these."

-The Dark Tower 1: The Gunslinger

  • "People want to know why I do this, why I write such gross stuff. I like to tell them that I have the heart of a small boy ... and I keep it in a jar on my desk." (King's source for this quip is Robert Bloch.)

Other writers

Influences

King is a fan of H.P. Lovecraft, discusses him at length in Danse Macabre, and has used several of Lovecraft's writing techniques in his own work. Lovecraft is probably influential on King's invention of bizarre, ancient deities, subtle connections between all of his tales, and the integration of fabricated newspaper clippings, trial transcripts and documents as narrative devices. King's invented trio of afflicted New England towns Jerusalem's Lot, Castle Rock and Derry are reminiscent of Lovecraft's Arkham, Dunwich and Innsmouth. King differs markedly from Lovecraft in his focus on extensive characterization, naturalistic dialogue, and at least occasional positive plot resolution, all notably absent in Lovecraft's writing. However, in On Writing, King is critical of Lovecraft's dialogue-writing skills, using passages from The Colour Out of Space as particularly poor examples.

Edgar Allan Poe, one of the fathers to the contemporary literary horror genre, exerts a noticeable influence over King's writing as well. One of the best examples of this is shown with The Shining. The mangled phrase, "And the red death held sway over all," hearkens back to the original, "And Darkness and Decay and the Red Death held illimitable dominion over all," from Poe's "The Masque of the Red Death." King's novel parallels Poe's short story fairly accurately. The two men also share the common theme of the doppelgänger, although one might argue that this is prevalent throughout the entire horror genre and cannot be relegated as specific to one author. In addition, the theme of the short story "Dolan's Cadillac" bears an almost identical comparison to Poe's "The Cask of Amontillado," up to and including a paraphrase of Fortunato's famous plea, "for the love of God, Montresor!" In The Shining, King refers to Poe as "the Great American Hack".

King has also openly declared his admiration for another, far less prolific author: Shirley Jackson. The novel Salem's Lot opens with a quotation from Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House. Tony, an imaginary playmate from The Shining bears a striking resemblance to another imaginary playmate with the same name from Jackson's Hangsaman. There are also many similarities between the character of Carrie from Carrie and that of Eleanor from The Haunting of Hill House. King claims that Carrie is actually based on two victims of bullying that he knew from school. A pivotal scene in Storm of the Century is based on Jackson's The Lottery.

King may well owe the most to John D. MacDonald. King was a big fan of MacDonald as he was growing up, and the debt he owes the older writer seems clear enough. Just as King is a popular master of the horror genre, so was MacDonald a peerless master of the crime procedural. King very likely learned much of the art of penetrating deep into character from MacDonald's best work..the ways King and MacDonald develop characters, even down to certain turns of language, are strikingly similar. And both men display an intense love of a good story, told well and clearly and in the vernacular of real people, living in the real world. Even their work-habits, in their respective primes, are similar: both spent a lot of time learning their craft, and a lot of time practicing it every single day. King's comment that you can't be a serious writer until you read four hours a day and write four hours a day could have come straight from MacDonald, who felt much the same way about the matter. MacDonald wrote an admiring preface to an early paperback version of Night Shift, and even had his famous character, Travis McGee, reading Cujo in one of the last McGee novels. King dedicated the novella Sun Dog to MacDonald, saying "I miss you, old friend."

In On Writing, King claimed that the one book he wishes he'd written is Lord of the Flies.

Collaborations

King has written two novels with acclaimed horror novelist Peter Straub, The Talisman and a sequel, Black House. King has indicated that he and Straub will likely write the third and concluding book in this series, the tale of Jack Sawyer, but has set no timeline for its completion.

King also wrote the nonfiction book, Faithful with novelist and fellow Red Sox fanatic Stewart O'Nan.

  • King has been referenced eight times on the television show Family Guy.
  1. When Brian runs over a person with a truck, he stops and says, "Oh, my God! Are you Stephen King?" The man replies, "No, I'm Dean Koontz." Brian gets back into his truck and drives backwards, running over Koontz again.
  2. While the Griffin family is at an amusement park, Stewie sees a toy clown, which is one of the prizes at a shooting game. He says, "How deliciously evil, like something out of Stephen King!", a reference to Pennywise in It.
  3. In that same episode, just after Stewie mocks the toy clown, the episode moves into the following cut-scene: King's editor is shown asking King for a summary for his 307th novel. King invents a story on the spot about a couple who are attacked by a lamp monster, then grabs the lamp from the editor's desk and waves it around making strange noises. The editor sighs and says, "You're not even trying anymore, are you?" and then says, "When can I have it?"
  4. In one of the "flashbacks", Meg recalls on the time the band Hanson came to the Griffin's house asking if they could use the phone. Peter takes out a shotgun and kills them, shouting "Holy crap! It's the Children of the Corn!"
  5. In a more recent episode, Stewie Griffin is riding his tricycle through a home (in a parody of Stanley Kubrick's 1980 adaptation of The Shining) and turns a corner to find two ghostly twins. He then says "Oh yes, all work and no play make's Stewie a dull boy", then takes out a rocket launcher and fires at the two. The twins also appeared in the second season episode "Peter Peter Caviar Eater". This scene is repeated in other cartoons, as well (such as the episode of Rocko's Modern Life where Heffer becomes a security guard).
  6. In another episode, Stewie Griffin uses his letter blocks to spell out Redrum, from The Shining.
  7. In an episode where Peter is subject to a near-death experience and revelation about himself, it is revealed that Lois's father attempted to bribe him out of marrying his daughter. This is possibly borrowed from Pet Sematary, in which Louis Creed, the main character, is subject to an attempted bribe from his future wife's father, Irwin Goldman. He offers to pay Louis's way through medical school if he leaves Rachel. The circumstances are also similar; both offers are made in like settings, down to both Lois's father and Goldman wearing smoking jackets at the time.
  8. In "Untitled Griffin Family History," Peter tells a story about a family member named "Richard Bachman".


  1. Fry walks in a library and passes a room titled "Stephen King, volumes A through Aardvark".
  2. In another episode, King is referenced on an episode related to The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Fry (the temporary Scarecrow) unsuccessfuly attempts to scare away some crows by reading excerpts from Christine.
  3. In The Honking, a series of zeroes and ones forms on a wall in the mansion from blood. Bender says the numbers are gibberish, but then catches sight of them in a mirror and runs, screaming, from the room.
  1. In the episode Tricycle of Terror, Billy gets a haunted tricycle from a haunted outhouse that leads to another dimension. After Billy gets mocked by his peers, the tricycle, which Billy calls "Trykie," goes a killing spree across the town, leaving nasty tire marks, likely inspired by Christine.
  2. In another episode, Billy and Mandy go to a winter camp where the camp counselor is named John "Jack" Daniel Torrance, which was the full name of the main character in The Shining
  3. In the episode Test of Time, Billy takes out a book for his report by an author named Stephen Hawkwing, a parody of Stephen Hawking. He states that the book "must be a horror story."
  1. In the episode "Insane Clown Poppy he has a small cameo as himself. While sitting at a book fair, Marge asks King if he has been writing any new horror? King says no: "I'm working on a biography of Benjamin Franklin. He's a fascinating man. He discovered electricity, and used it to torture small animals and Green Mountain men. And that key he tied to the end of a kite? It opened the gates of Hell!" Marge asks him to contact her when he gets back to horror, and he writes a note to himself: "Call Marge, re: horror."
  2. In another episode, where Lisa is the President of the United States, Bart has a conversation with the ghost of Billy Carter, a direct homage to The Shining, where Nicholson is sitting at the hotel bar, talking to the ghost of the previous caretaker.
  3. The Simpsons episode involving the Movementarians starts with Bart and Homer walking through the airport; they pass a books store called "Just King and Crichton Bookstore", inside Hans Moleman is asking if the store carries any Robert Ludlum books.
  4. The Simpsons episode "Treehouse of Horror V" includes a parody of The Shining called "The Shinning."
Bart: "Don't you mean The Shining?
Groundskeeper Willy: "Sssh boy! Do you wanna get sued?" Also Homer sits at a bar and has a conversation with Moe who was most likely another caretaker.
There was also a recent "Treehouse of Horror" parody called "The Ned Zone" in which Ned Flanders can see people's death if he touches them. This is an obvious parody of the King novel The Dead Zone.
  1. The Simpsons episode "The Springfield Files", was a cross bewteen The Simpsons and the X-Files. At a certain point, the typewriter words at the bottom of the screen begin repeating "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy", a nod to the Shining.
  • A parody of King, named Even Prince was featured on the paranormal mystery cartoon Martin Mystery.
  • A 1990 episode of Quantum Leap titled The Boogieman involved Sam Beckett becoming a hack 1960s horror writer with a teenaged friend named Stevie. Near the end of the episode, Sam discovers the kid's last name and realizes that he may have helped inspire Christine, Cujo, The Dark Half, and other early King novels.
  • In the 1996 film Big Bully, Rick Moranis' character tires of people entering the bookstore at which he is signing his book and asking for the location of the newest Stephen King novel; thus, he lies to a customer that his own book features characters that die and are buried at an ancient Indian burial ground. The customer comments that the book sounds like Pet Sematary (to which Moranis agrees) and purchases the title.
  • A 2005 episode of South Park involves Cartman, who suffers from a head trauma, claiming that he can now use his psychic abilities to solve murders. A man in a yellow raincoat with blood on it is seen at every murder scene. While Cartman isn't the person to put the two together, the man is a reference to Frank Dodd, who is a murderer in The Dead Zone and Cujo. Many South Park episodes also include an ancient Indian burial ground-type theme, a reference to "Pet Sematary".
  • The Ramones song "It's Not My Place (in the 9 to 5 World)" from the albums Pleasant Dreams (1981) contains the lyric: "Roger Corman's on a talk show/With Allan Arkush and Stephen King, you know." The band also recorded the song "Pet Sematary" for the 1989 film adaptation of King's novel of the same name. He also wrote the liner notes of "We're A Happy Family: A Tribute To The Ramones".
  • The Nirvana song Serve the Servants from the album In Utero (1993) contains the lyric: "A down payment on another one at Salem's lot".
  • Eminem references one of Stephen King's novels in his song "Lose Yourself" for the 8 Mile soundtrack. He says "Mom, I love you but this trailer's got to go, I cannot grow old in Salem's Lot"
  • The 1980s Welsh Alternative Rock band The Alarm recorded a song entitled "The Stand" and based it upon King's novel of the same name.
  • In the episode "Meatzone" of Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Meatwad eats silicon caulk he finds in Frylock's room, and thinks he can predict people's futures by touching their hands, a parody of the novel and movie The Dead Zone.
  • In 2004, King made an appearance on Comedy Central's hit television show Chapelle's Show, in a segment called "Ask a Black Dude", featuring comedian Paul Mooney. It was a frequent segment in the show, in which random people (including the occasional celebrities including Twisted Sister's Dee Snider), would ask Mooney their various questions about the African-American culture. King's question in particular was whether or not Black individuals had felt comfortable going to White undertakers. Mooney was nonetheless baffled at the question.
  • The work of Stephen King has been a popular source of inspiration for many heavy metal bands.
  • The Anthrax song "Among the Living," found on the 1987 album of the same name, is based on King's The Stand. King returned the favor a made a passing reference to the group in his second Dark Tower book.
  • A number of songs by Blind Guardian are inspired by the works of Stephen King. These songs include "Somewhere Far Beyond", "Tommyknockers", "Altair 4", etc.
  • In an episode of 'Just Shoot Me!', Nina Van Horn (Wendie Malick) mentions being banned from Maine because she ran over Stephen King.
  • In another episode of 'Just Shoot Me!', Nina Van Horn (Wendie Malick) describes a situation ending with a reference to being covered in pig's blood. A co-worker tells her "Nina, that is the ending to Carrie"
  • In the epsiode 'camp' of Home Movies, Coach McGuirk runs through a forest hallucinating. During this sequence for a brief moment the image of Walter and Perry can be seen in a bloody hallway with 'reccos' written behind them. This is an obvious reference to The Shining's 'Redrum'.

Trivia

  • King is a fan of the rock band AC/DC. They did the soundtrack for his 1986 film Maximum Overdrive. He is also a fan of the Ramones, who recorded the song "Pet Semetary" for the 1989 adaptation at King's request.
  • Many of his novels feature Plymouth Valiants or Dodge Darts and their derivatives (Scamp, Duster, etc.). Christine was about an earlier Chrysler car, a 1958 Plymouth Fury. (The novel and the 1983 movie are both factually incorrect about the Fury; they actually describe a Plymouth Belvedere. In 1958, the Fury was a limited production car with gold trim and was not available in red. Yet, it is explained that the owner of the car ordered the red paint special.))
  • Stephen King does not own a cell phone, a fact pointed out on the dust jacket of Cell.
  • King often names his heroes and antiheroes Richard.
  • King will not sign photographs. He feels that is something that should be reserved for movie stars.

Bibliography

Note: + denotes a book is related to the Dark Tower series, either in characters, places, or events, or, as in the case of the short story collections, a story or two.

Novels and short fiction collections

Non-fiction

Original audiobooks

Original ebooks

Comics

Unpublished work

See also:

Films and TV

King has granted permission to student filmmakers to make adaptations of his short stories for one dollar (see Dollar Baby).

In 1986 King made his motion picture directorial debut with Maximum Overdrive, from his own screenplay inspired by, but not based on, his short story "Trucks". King has not directed a film since.

See also

References

  • ¹"On Being Nineteen (and a Few Other Things)" Introduction to The Gunslinger (revised edition) 2003 King, Stephen Viking/Penguin Group pp. XVII-XVIII