Stephen King is one of the most influential authors of today. His
award-winning novels and short stories are known world -wide. His many awards
and nominations have created a space for him in the literary world. King is a
true “Horror King”, for his books, turned movies, have scared millions world-
wide. Stephen King has helped bring America to prominence through his many
books, essays and short stories.
Stephen Edwin King was born on September
21, 1947 at the Maine General Hospital in Portland, Maine. His parents were
Donald Edwin King and Ruth Pillsbury King. Stephen being the only natural born
child in the family and his older brother David having been adopted at birth two
years earlier.
“The Kings were the typical, “nuclear” family of the fifties
until one night when Donald King said he was stepping out for cigarettes and was
never heard from again.” At this point Ruth took over raising the family with
help from other relatives of the family. They traveled throughout many states
over several years finally moving back to Durham, Maine in 1958. (P.R. 5 pg.1)
Stephen King began his actual writing career in January of 1959 when David
King and Stephen decided to publish their own local town newspaper named Dave\'s
Rag. David bought a mimeograph and they created a paper that sold for five cents
an issue.
Stephen King attended Lisbon High School, in Lisbon, Maine in
1962. Collaborating with his best friend Chris Chesley, in 1963 they published a
collection of 18 short stories called People, Places, and Things-Volume I.
King\'s stories included \"Hotel at the End of the Road\", \"I\'ve Got to Get
Away!” \"The Dimension Warp\", \"The Thing at the Bottom of the Well\", \"The
Stranger\", \"I\'m Falling\", \"The Cursed Expedition\", and \"The Other Side of
the Fog.\" A year later King\'s amateur press Triad and Gaslight Books,
published a two part book titled \"The Star Invaders\".
Stephen King made
his first actual published appearance in 1965 in the magazine Comics Review with
his story \"I Was a Teenage Grave Robber.\" The story ran about 6,000 words in
length. In 1966, Stephen King graduated from high school and took a scholarship
to attend the University of Maine. Looking back on his high school days, King
recalled that \"my high school career was totally undistinguished. I was not at
the top of my class, nor at the bottom.\"
Later that summer King began
working on a novel called \"Getting It On\", about some kids who take over a
classroom and try unsuccessfully to ward off the National Guard. During his
first year at college, King completed his first full-length novel, \"The Long
Walk.\" He sent the novel to Bennett Cerf/Random House only to have it rejected.
King took the rejection bad and filed the book away. Stephen King made his first
small sale with his story \"The Glass Floor\" for the amount of thirty-five
dollars. In June 1970, Stephen King graduated from the University of Maine with
a Bachelor of Science degree in English and a certificate to teach high school.
King\'s next idea came from the poem by Robert Browning, \"Childe Roland to
the Dark Tower Came.\" He began work on The Dark Tower saga. But due to his lack
of money he was unable to finish the novel and it too was filed away. King took
a measly job of pumping gas earning $1.25 an hour. Stephen King then began to
earn money for his writings by submitting his short stories to men\'s magazines
such as Cavalier.
On January 2, 1971, Tabitha Jane Spruce and Stephen King
were married. And in the fall of 1971, King took a teaching job at Hampden
Academy earning $6,400 a year. The Kings then moved to Hermon, a town west of
Bangor, Maine.
Stephen King then began work on a short story about a teenage
girl named Carietta White. After a completing a few pages, King decided it was
not a good story and threw it away. Fortunately for Stephen, his wife Tabitha
took the pages out and read them. She encouraged her husband to continue the
story. He did. In January 1973, King submitted Carrie to Doubleday. In March,
Doubleday bought the book. “On May 12, Doubleday sold the paperback rights of
Carrie to New American Library for $400,000.” Based on the book contract,
Stephen King would get half of that. King quit his teaching job to pursue
writing full time. And the rest, as they say, is history. (P.R. 5 pg.2)
Over
the past 25 years, Stephen King has written over thirty best selling novels and
short stories. Following is a list of his best selling novels.
Carrie
‘Salems Lot
The Shining
The Stand
The Dead Zone
Firestarter
Cujo
Christine
Pet Sematary
IT
The
Eyes of the Dragon
Misery
The Tommyknockers
The Dark Half
Needful Things
Dolores Claiborne
Gerald’s Game
Insomnia
Rose Madder
Desperation
Bag of Bones
Apt Pupil
Storm of the Century
The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon
Hearts in
Atlantis
Most of these titles might sound familiar, even to those who don’t
read Stephen King’s novels. A lot of these have been made into movies, such as
Carrie, ‘Salems Lot, and Pet Sematary to name a few. “The Shawshank Redemption”,
one of the most recent video releases, was written by Stephen King.
“The
Shawshank Redemption” was nominated for seven Academy Awards, including Best
Picture and Best Screenplay Based on Material Previously Produced or Published.
The movie unfortunately did not win any of these awards, but it did win other
awards. It won two Golden Globes, a Director’s Guild Award and two Screen Actors
Guild Awards. (P.R. 1 pg.180)
King not only writes novels, but also series
of books. He has written The Dark Tower series and The Green Mile series, which
was recently transformed into a movie starring Academy Award-winning actor Tom
Hanks. While King attended college, at the University of Maine, Orono, he
published books under the pen name, Richard Bachman. His very first book was
titled Rage. Following that first book were, in order of publication: The Long
Walk, Roadwork, The Running Man, Thinner and The Regulators.
King has been
nominated on several occasions for the World Fantasy Award. “The Mist”, just one
of many of King’s short stories was nominated for this award. “The Way Station”,
another short story was nominated for the Nebula Award, which was voted upon by
members of the SFWA, Science Fiction Writers of America. King even won a very
special British Fantasy Award, which is rarely awarded to American authors. “In
1981, King’s alma mater honored him with a Career Alumni Award.” (P.R. 2 Pg. 69)
Despite all of his praise for his novels, most people and critics were
skeptical of his screenplays, including Glenn Kenney, of Entertainment Weekly.
However, even harsh critics can see someone as good as King. Kenney admitted
“The Shawshank Redemption” was good, but he didn’t quite call it a masterpiece.
He claimed it to be a “provisional masterpiece,” and he awarded it with a grade
of A-, which was high praise. (P.R. 1 pg.181) Rob Reiner, screener of several of
King’s movie screenplays, commented on King’s novels after completely reading a
few of them: “…people assume that Stephen King is just a schlocky kind of horror
writer. But if you read his books, you’ll discover he is a brilliant writer…”
(P.R. 1 pg. 154) King’s teacher at UMO, Burton Hatlen said, after King’s rise in
popularity, “…not, as Thomas Edwards suggests in a recent New York Review of
Books, an “almost serious” writer- but rather one of the most truly serious
novelists of today.” (P.R. 1 pg.186)
“Stephen King is appropriately called
the “Master of Horror”. His books have been translated into 33 different
languages and published in over 35 different countries. There are currently over
300 million copies of his novels in publication worldwide. “ (P.R. 5 pg.2)
In June 1999, Stephen King was severely injured in an accident that left him
in critical condition with injuries to his lung, broken ribs, a broken leg and a
severely fractured hip. After three weeks of operations, he was released from
the Central Maine Medical Center in Bangor, Maine. He received over 300 letters
from fans all over the world regarding his condition in only the first week of
hospitalization. King is currently bedridden and requires rehabilitation. He’s
expected to be able to walk by June of this year, nearly one full year after
that van struck him in downtown Bangor. Because of his injuries, all of his
projects were postponed for at least a year. (P.R. 3 Pg. 2)
In conclusion,
Stephen King is not an easy person to write about. There are thousands of
websites and books devoted to him and yet, none mention his international fame.
Though my findings were slim, I feel that, given the information available, I
have successfully proved that Stephen King has helped bring America into
prominence through his writings. King is a dedicated writer and there is no end
to his writing in site.
“…And aside from being a force of nature,
he’s a pretty good guy.” As said by Robert Parker, introducer of speakers at a
benefit, Voices Louder Than Words, at Harvard. (P.R. 1 Pg. 161)
1.
Beahm, George. America’s Best Loved Boogeyman Stephen King. Andrews McMeel
Publishing Kansas City 1998.
2. Beahm, George. The Stephen King
Story. Andrew’s McMeel Publishing Kansas City 1991.
3. “Accident
Recovery Update.” Stephen King Official Web Presence. http://www.stephenking.com
(30 Jan. 2000)
4. “Novel Database.”
http:///www.geocities.com/Area51/Cavern/1947/kingworks.htm (10 Feb. 2000)
5. “Stephen King Biography.” http://utopianweb.com/king/bio.html (10
Feb. 2000)
6. King, Stephen. ‘Salems Lot. Doubleday and Company New
York 1975.