Celebrity Gossip

The 15 Most Spine-Chilling Stephen King Books to Check Out After Watching “The Boogeyman”

Yes, “It” is the reason legions of readers developed a fear of clowns. But it’s also King’s masterpiece.

“It” is the “Moby Dick” of horror novels: long, unwieldy, filled with digressions and metaphor, sometimes disturbing, sometimes poetic. The members of the Losers Club are some of King’s most well-drawn characters; there’s anxious hypochondriac Eddie Kaspbrak, loud-mouthed Richie Tozier, compassionate leader Bill Denbrough, and of course, there’s Pennywise. “It” is King’s most terrifying villain, a demented shapeshifter who poisons the whole town of Derry from its perch in the sewers and feeds on the fear of children.

The novel’s narrative unfolds with the Losers returning to their hometown to face an evil they barely remember, the boundaries between their adult and childhood identities becoming increasingly porous as they begin to relive long-repressed terrors. “It” is about destiny, friendship, and the adolescent horrors that shape our adult selves. The novel is required reading for fans of King and lovers of literature. If you’re a fan of clowns, though, you might want to sit this one out.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

TV Shows Doing Nostalgia Right (Without Making It Cringe)
“The Shawshank Redemption” Wouldn’t Find Audience Now
Horrors of the Saturn: Sega’s Troubled Yet Undeterred Console at 30
Digging Up the Scarecrow Horror Hidden Gem
‘The Right Person Will Stay’ Due May 21