For decades I've read Stephen King books with no sense of order (since the early 1980s when I first read
The Stand). Someone in a SK reader group suggested reading the books in order of publication. She stated that this gave her an interesting sense of seeing King's style develop and also let her see small throwbacks King put in later novels, referring to earlier ones.
So, I'm taking up this task and will reread any of his novels I'd read previously when I get to them. I've gotten through
Carrie and
'Salem's Lot, neither of which I'd read before, and am now about 25% through
The Shining (which I read so long ago that I don't remember much).
[Side Note: Actually, I should be reading his story
Rage next, but that story is no longer available unless you can get your hands on an older copy in The Bachman Books that has it. King pulled it from publication once he learned that the Columbine shooters used it as a sort of handbook and manifesto for their crimes. And I don't want to pay more than $1,000 for a used copy of that collection.]
I'm constantly reminded as I read King's novels that he is a gifted storyteller and that nearly all screen adaptations of his work fall far short of the books. The best bits of his stories are getting inside a character's head, which rarely translates to the screen.
Anyway, I'm enjoying this and trying not to see or hear Jack Nicholson as I read. (Sorry, all you Kubrick fans, but Nicholson's portrayal is nothing like the Jack Torrance in the book.)