@octoberfog

I have yet to read my first Stephen King book, but I've picked up an old copy of 11/22/63 and you're getting me hyped for it!

@bella.is.reading

Noted ✍️ Also, the wedding photos are so cute🥹

@kellcrump2279

Ive read 47 stephen king books and ive gotta say hes my favorite author for sure

@adamm341

I’m almost done with IT. This is my first SK book and I’m loving it!

@beccasneed7730

King loved Kathy Bates as Annie Wilkes in Misery and wrote Delores Claiborne for her to star in.
Carrie was the first King novel I read in 4th grade

@aliciashort2359

I read Later in 24, it was my first SK book. I finished it, immediately turned back to page 1 and reread the entire thing. The ending threw me, I had to go back and see if I had missed the signs. Love your videos! Hope to see more Shorts!

@tamaraumberhandt4927

My first SK book was The Stand in high school, 20 years ago lol. Loved it.

@ghostircs

my first stephen king book was the institute, then misery (amazing read). i have 'it' now, but the size is intimidating

@BeetleOnThatJuice

The Shining was the only Stephen King book that I’ve read 10/10 (despite my vast collection) and now I am on the look for Doctor Sleep, the sequel for my beloved Overlook Hotel.

@quinncrochet19

Just finished Salems Lot ❤❤ Loved it!

@jordantidwell4327

Started my Stephen king journey in October. So far read Salems lot, The shining, IT, pet semetary, needful things, and thinner. Obviously I’ve got a ways to go but pet semetery is my favorite so far

@angiehh516

11/22/63 is truly incredible! My favorite of his so far!! 🎉

@lady732

Desperation was my one and only Stephen King, 20 years later I still have nightmares

@izzieluv

I read Night Shift in college for a gothic literature class. The titular story has me still afraid of rats and bats 14 years later. Strawberry Spring was so good, I still think about it. Those are the two I remember most from it.
Edit: to be fair I wasn't fond of rats and bats before that, but that story certainly didn't help.

@curtismcdonald6461

Gunslinger is one of my favorites Steven King books because Steven King developed and unique and original vernacular or language style for the gunslinger himself. It’s almost a combination of “cowboy Talk” Combined with “Elizabeth  English”. Very imaginative to create a character this unique with his own way of speaking. 
It’s a little drawing at First to hear the gunslinger Talk in the beginning of the story but once you get to the second chapter we’re able to understand what he’s talking about. The plot takes off slowly but then gets incredibly good at the end.

@sanitycalamity

Duma Key is so good and not talked about as much as many of his others so I love to see that get 5 stars from you. The audiobook is fantastic as well.

@MarisaAndChew

My first King book was The Tommyknockers. I was like 13 or 14 when I read it but certain parts still have residency in my mind 25 years later. 

Misery triggered my own PTSD but I still couldn't put it down 🤔

Dr Sleep IMO was the sequel we needed in order to truly understand "what happened to Danny?" The fact that King was suffering from addiction when he wrote The Shining and was clean when he wrote Dr Sleep really added to how much we needed to know Danny now!  

Fairytale is so far my favorite King book but I honestly haven't read too many, I felt like it was the most like all of his writing styles and somehow it just worked. I never felt more inside an author's mind before. 

Holly (I can't recall if you listed it) was great as a stand-alone or as a follow up to the Mister Mercedes trilogy. I appreciated that King was able to put COVID, vaccines, and the political divide into a book without being harmful to either side. I also assume this is the book that got his books banned in Florida 😱 which honestly means even if the topics make you uncomfortable you should read it, a book is only banned when it's stepped on fragile toes and has a message people likely need to hear. Fight censorship and read Holly for freedom of speech if nothing else! 

Colorado kid was good but not really memorable but it's a different genre (crime) and it's short so there isn't much room for King to build us a world! 

Later is similar to Colorado Kid, a good book, easy to read, nothing overly special but not horrible either. The title suited the book perfectly!

@garagegeek4863

Awesome.  Of course, subjective.  I felt Dolores C showed his strengths as a writer and builder of character and suspense.  Misery as well.  His later books seem a bit bloated and often repetitive both in and among books.  He is a master of making a character believable within just a few paragraphs or pages.

@BohemiAnnA

Excellence synopsis! Or shall I say, synopses? Have you read the stand? That might be my top favorite? Maybe Gerald’s game is up there at the top. All dark no stars is also superb

@senneboorsma460

My heart bleeds for that Fairy Tale ranking😢
Rly rly loved it, I thinks its actually a really great take on traditional fairy tale stories :)

Awesome vid tho❤