Monday, October 11, 2021

Stephen King: ‘I loved Lord of the Flies the way kids love Harry Potter’

 


Stephen King


The 

Books

 0f my 

life


Stephen King: ‘I loved Lord of the Flies the way kids love Harry Potter’

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The horror author on Dr Seuss, the radicalism of Earl Thompson, and the perfect whodunnit

Friday 11 October 2011


My earliest reading memory 
I was five years old, in our third floor apartment in Stratford, Connecticut. The book was The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins by Dr Seuss.

My favourite book growing up
Probably And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie. It is the perfect whodunnit.

The book that changed me as a teenager
Lord of the Flies by William Golding. I was totally invested, totally there. You know the way kids were about Harry Potter at the height of the craze? That was me with Ralph and Jack.


The writer who changed my mind
I was 12 years old when I read Studs Lonigan, by James T Farrell. It did what juvenile novels did but with grownup concerns. I understood Studs from the jump. It’s a trilogy, which follows an optimistic young Chicago teen during the Depression until in the third volume he becomes a washed-up, bitter alcoholic. It fuelled my teenage cynicism and offered a fictional portrait of societal forces that were grinding Americans down. A year or two later it was supplanted by Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath as my perfect Depression book.

The book that made me want to be a writer 
Lord of the Flies: it was about kids, and I was a kid. The plot was simple and the descent into savagery was believable. I read it at the age of 12 – it was only later that I grasped the symbolism of the severed pig’s head and the sexual subtext. I felt that if I could do something like that, I’d be happy. And guess what? I was right.

The book I came back to 
A Garden of Sand by Earl Thompson. I wanted to know if it was as radical as I remembered. It was. Also, Last Exit to Brooklyn by Hubert Selby Jr. It was better than I remembered, but just as radical.

The book I could never read again 
Probably The Robe by Lloyd C Douglas.

The book I discovered later in life
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers. Written by a young woman who was really no more than a child, it focuses on the importance John Singer, a “deaf-mute”, has for three characters. Singer doesn’t really care for any of them, he has his own fish to fry, but they think he’s all-knowing and all-wise. Think how people feel about God.

The book I am currently reading
After Midnight, short stories by Daphne du Maurier, which will be published in October 2025.


Holly by Stephen King is published by Hodder & Stoughton and available now in paperback, ebook and audio. 


THE GUARDIAN




THE BOOKS OF MY LIFE

2021
The books of my life / Amanda Gorman / ‘I wanted my words to re-sanctify the steps of the Capitol’Mary Beard / ‘Virgil was a radical rap artist of the first century BC’
Stephen King: ‘I loved Lord of the Flies the way kids love Harry Potter’
Gabriel Byrne: ‘I’ve never played Hamlet, but in many ways I am him’
Curtis Sittenfeld / ‘Sweet Valley High is not respected – but I found the books riveting’
Elif Shafak / ‘Reading Orlando was like plunging into a cold but beautifully blue sea’
Jason Reynolds / “Reading rap lyrics made me realise that poetry could be for me”
Michael Rosen / ‘My comfort read? Great Expectations’
Siri Hustvedt / ‘I responded viscerally to De Beauvoir’s The Second Sex’
Alan Garner / ‘The Chronicles of Narnia are atrociously written’
Rose Tremain / ‘My comfort reads are MasterChef cookbooks’
Oliver Jeffers / ‘Catch-22 was the first time I had a physical reaction to a book’
Penelope Lively / ‘Beatrix Potter seemed so exotic, unlike my world of palm trees’


2022
David Baddiel / The book that changed me? John Berger’s Ways of Seeing
David Baddiel / The book that changed me? John Berger’s Ways of Seeing
Edmund White / ‘My earliest reading memory is a lady toad with a nasty temper’
David Mitchell / ‘If I need cheering up, Jamie Oliver’s recipes usually help’
Isabel Allende / ‘I have been displaced most of my life’
Barbara Kingsolver / ‘Middlemarch is about everything, for every person, at every age’


2023
Richard Ford / ‘I don’t read for comfort. Comfort I source elsewhere’
Bret Easton Ellis: ‘I connected with Quentin Tarantino’
Lauren Groff / ‘Virginia Woolf’s Flush is delightfully bananas’
Natalie Haynes / ‘I couldn’t stop reading Stephen King - even at the top of the Eiffel Tower’
Richard Armitage / ‘I used to stand on the Lord of the Rings to reach the top shelf in my wardrobe’

2024
Mieko Kawakami / “Franz Kafka es mi lectura reconfortante”

2025
Niall Williams / ‘When I first read Chekhov, I thought: “He’s not so great”’
Graham Norton / ‘The Bell Jar changed how I felt about books’




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