Written by Jon Williams
Call it a hunch, but we’re guessing that a lot of your patrons are Stephen King fans. Luckily for those patrons, there’s plenty of recent and upcoming King material to keep them quivering in fear for quite some time.
To start, we
need to go back almost to the very beginning. Now, of course, King is a
well-known, bestselling author with more than fifty books to his credit, but that
wasn’t always the case. The Dead Zone
was just the fourth novel King published under his own name. Released in 1979, it
deals with a young man both gifted and cursed with psychic abilities after a
catastrophic car accident. The novel spawned both a 1983 movie and a 2002 TV
series that ran for six seasons, but it has never been available in
audiobook format until
now. This classic is narrated by actor James Franco.
There’s also
plenty of new material from King. His latest release, out this week, is Gwendy’s Button Box, a novella
written with help from publisher, editor, and fellow horror writer Richard
Chizmar. The story takes place in Castle Rock, Maine, a familiar setting for
King fans. The Dead Zone was set in
Castle Rock, as were Cujo, The Dark Half, and a number of
novellas and short stories scattered throughout his collections. The 1991 novel
Needful Things was originally billed
as “the last Castle Rock story,” but apparently he wasn’t done with the little
town after all.
And that’s
not the only collaboration King has on his docket. Coming this September is Sleeping Beauties, a new novel
written in tandem with his son Owen King. It details a dystopian future in
which all women (except one!) fall prey to a strange cocooned state while they
sleep, and men are left to their own devices. Of course, King is no stranger to
this type of collaboration, having teamed up with his other son, author Joe
Hill, for the short stories “Throttle”
and “In
the Tall Grass.”
As popular
as his books are, when it comes to Stephen King, they’re only part of the
story. Another part is all the adaptations that have taken his work from the
page to screens both big and small. In that regard, there’s a pretty full slate
on the horizon. First up is The Mist,
a ten-episode series premiering on Spike on June 22. The novella, available on
its own or collected with other short stories in Skeleton Crew, was previously made
into a movie in 2007. Then, on August 9, Mr.
Mercedes comes to the Audience Network, based on the first
book of a trilogy
King wrote about a retired detective facing off against a twisted killer.
In addition
to regular TV, fans can also look to the streaming services for some upcoming
adaptations. Coming to Netflix later this year is Gerald’s Game, the story of a woman
who is trapped handcuffed to a bed after her husband dies suddenly. Much of the novel
takes place within main character Jessie Burlingame’s head, so it will be
interesting to see how it translates to the screen. Also coming to Netflix in
2017 is 1922, about a man who is convinced his murdered wife is haunting him.
It’s based on a novella in Full Dark, No Stars, which also
contains the story that was the basis for the movie A Good Marriage. Then, beginning
production later this year with no set debut date, is the Hulu series Castle Rock. Not much is known about it
other than the setting, the small Maine town mentioned above, but the first
teaser contained elements of King classics like Misery and plenty of others.
And speaking
of King classics, one of the biggest (both literally and figuratively) is
coming to theaters on September 8. It, the epic novel about a
shape-shifting creature that feeds on children and the gang of outcast kids
that decide enough is enough, has engendered a fear of clowns in readers since
its release in 1986. It’s a whopper: the print edition comes in at over 1,000
pages, and the audiobook narration takes up 35 discs. A previous adaptation
came in the form of a 3-hour
miniseries in 1990, and this time around will be split into two feature
films, with the second installment coming in 2018.
And then
there’s The Dark Tower…but we’ll have
more to say about that soon. In the meantime, make sure you have plenty of
Stephen King material on your shelves for patrons to explore and enjoy as these
new works and adaptations come along. And don’t be surprised if some of them
ask you if they can check out a nightlight, too.
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