I got Mary Stewart's The Hollow Hills, Agatha Christie- Postern of Fate, The Joy of Sex and The Onion Field. And Pentimento.
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I am too much of a chicken to read King.
Oh me too. Except the niecelet gave me some huge more recent book to read. She promised it won't scare me. And my dad seconded the rec, so I will soon have read King beyond On Writing.
On Facebook, a friend was looking at the NYT bestsellers the week she was born, and she got a Stephen King book, as did many of us.
Infant.
I got Valley of the Dolls! And Chaim Potok's The Chosen.
Warning to ita about the Dark Tower. One character in that who you will hate worse than a Magical Negro. Well, half a character.
I got The War Lover, The Ugly American, Exodus and The Elements of Style. The Breaking Point.
I got quite the male-dominated list: John Updike, Arthur Hailey, Gore Vidal, Leon Uris, William Styron, JK Galbraith, Durrell, Michener and Desmond Morris (ah, The Naked Ape, how horrified will I be if I ever re-read you again? Not that I'm likely to.).
And Julia Child's The French Chef Cookbook.
Mary Stewart and Jacqueline Susann (Basically every writer in a used-books store ever.)
I haven't read King in a long, long time, but his books have stayed with me more than a lot of the stuff I read in junior high. My dad had a whole shelf of King, and my parents didn't monitor my reading, so I burned through them the same way I did every other book in the house. I was probably too young for them-- I think I was 11 when I read Firestarter-- but I don't know what I'd think of the books now.
Yeah, I was 11 when it came out and read it right away. I think most of us who love King devoured him at pretty young ages. He writes in a very accessible way, so it's not really a surprise.
I hate Dark Tower with a fiery, fiery passion. I loved the first four books so much, but then the hatred started building until my head exploded at the end.
My birthday week was The Thorn Birds.
I've always been too scared to read King before, but I decided to give it a chance anyway. Salem's Lot did freak me out more than once. I thought Carrie was excellent, but it didn't really scare me for some reason.
And speaking of scary novels. I am currently reading What the Night Knows. Which is very scary, but the family is so Mary Sue that it is kind of sickening at times. The only other Koontz I have read is the novella Darkness Under the Sun which is sort of a prequel to the novel so I don't know if the Mary Sue heroes are typical for him or not.