The 10 Best Stephen King Novels
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Stephen King has transcended anything we could muster up to write about him in 2019. This makes picking the best Stephen King books a daunting challenge. One of the most transformative writers in American history, King helped kick-start a horror boom throughout the ’70s and ’80s—and outlived it (along with a near-fatal accident) to keep his career alive through to this very month, which sees the release of The Institute, King’s 61st novel since 1974. That staggering number doesn’t even count short-story collections, nonfiction, scripts and other ephemera. And while King hasn’t maintained a perfect batting average across those dozens and dozens of releases, he hasn’t lost his spark, either; early buzz on The Institute is highly positive, and recent releases The Outsider, Revival, Mr. Mercedes and more all continue to garner praise and enviable sales.
Beyond the printed page, King is in the midst of an ongoing film and television revival, with adaptations like Gerald’s Game, the upcoming Doctor Sleep and the two-part It lighting up screens big and small. As Pennywise creeps back into theaters this week for the Andy Muschietti-directed It Chapter Two, float into the list of Stephen King books ranked below and find out where the source material lands on our list of King’s best novels. (Note: short-story and novella collections, while among King’s best work, were exempt from this list, as was his memoir, On Writing.)
Here are the top 10 best Stephen King novels of all time:
10. The Long Walk (1979)
Released under the pseudonym Richard Bachman, The Long Walk is actually the first novel Stephen King wrote—he just didn’t finish and sell it until after Carrie and a few of his all-time classics were already on shelves. The Bachman identity was largely a way for King to publish more novels, faster, but fans often like to distinguish the Bachman books as King’s non-supernatural outings, although Thinner bucks that trend and King has since run wild across ample non-horror genres. Known best today as a precursor to Battle Royale, The Hunger Games and countless other “teens compete to the death at the behest of a totalitarian society” iterations, The Longest Walk takes place in a world in which 100 teenage boys annually participate a walking competition. Walking may not sound as thrilling as a fast-paced sci-fi death-match, but these boys must maintain a minimum speed throughout their march, and the contest only ends when all but one walker has dropped dead or been eliminated for violating rules. It’s not a stretch to feel the influence of the Vietnam War here, as King depicts a country eager to send its young men off to grueling, inevitable death, with the promise of a better life dangled as a prize for those who survive. There’s a potent anger present in most of the Bachman books, and The Longest Walk mines that most potently. —Steve Foxe
9. Lisey’s Story (2006)
Stephen King is fairly infamous for crafting protagonists who just happen to be bestselling authors with beautiful wives, but it wasn’t until 2006’s Lisey’s Story that King gave the wife a turn in the spotlight. Lisey’s Pulitzer Prize-winning husband has been dead for two years when her story begins, but his ghost (metaphorically) haunts her. At the prompting of a nosey academic, Lisey finally sorts through her husband’s remaining papers, revealing secrets even a 25-year marriage couldn’t uncover. Much of Lisey’s Story, written as a sort of love letter to King’s wife, Tabitha, reads like a non-genre domestic drama, which makes the moments of horror—and romance—that much more affecting. This one will no doubt be controversial among King’s more straightforward fear-fiend fans, but as a representative of King’s 21st-century work, which has found him exploring, by and large, a more contemplative and sympathetic worldview, you could do much worse. More recent novels like The Outsider and Revival hit higher highs of horror, but are less consistent and ultimately affecting than Lisey’s Story —Steve Foxe
8. The Dead Zone (1979)
The Dead Zone, released at the tail end of the ‘70s, is sometimes considered the cap of King’s first hot streak; Firestarter followed in 1980, leading to a decade of immense highs (It) and embarrassing lows (The Tommyknockers) as the author battled substance-abuse issues. If The Dead Zone is the end of an era, it’s a deserving coda. Reluctant protagonist Johnny Smith spends almost five years in a coma, and awakens with the ability to see hidden details and limited predictions upon touching people and objects. At first, Smith wants only to maintain his normal life as a schoolteacher, but when his abilities draw unwanted attention, he soon finds himself called upon to help solve a sadistic murder streak. His successful role in the investigation creates enough of a stir that he is let go from his job and must start over in another state…where he encounters Greg Stillson, a rising politician who raises an alarm for Smith. When Smith arranges a chance to touch Stillson’s hand, the vision of a horrible future he receives may finally be enough to spur Smith into action. The Dead Zone is a novel-length treatment of the old “Would you kill baby Hitler to prevent the Holocaust?” conundrum, and feels more relevant than ever in our current political climate. —Steve Foxe