I read a ton of Stephen King as a kid and I think my kid will be into it, but I’m not sure which book would be a good entry point. He has so many different types of story from weird to horror to mind bending. What would you use as a good entry for his horror? For an 11 year old.
Update… Thank you so much everyone! This thread is making me want to reread the books myself too 😄
The gunslinger is just a great and pretty short book.
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Where are you from OP? this can influence what you deem acceptable for an 11 yo. E. g. americans seem ok with gruesome murder while puritanical towards any sex or nudity whatsoever.
Europe, but I’m not ok with sex stuff yet, not for an 11 year old. Wouldn’t go for too gruesome either.
so from the top recommendations, Gunslinger contains a weird ghost sex scene, IT has a child ogry, The Stand has quite a bit of sex
Thank you. I’m definitely not giving them IT cause of that weird orgy.
you could just tell them to skip the chapter, it doesn’t add to the story
Sounds like you don’t have kids cause there’s no way I can just say to not read it, that only makes it the first chapter that will be read.
I don’t and I was an obedient child
I read my first King book at that age: IT. I’m not sure I’d recommend it for a child of that age, though.
Me, too. It was a gateway book.
Kids love trains - S. King
I would actually recommend Michael Crichton for an 11-year-old rather than King.
Jurassic Park, Sphere, Congo, Andromeda Strain; all fantastic novels that will be interesting without traumatizing a young reader.
I read King’s The Stand at age 11, and about halfway through it, I literally remember thinking, “I might be too young to be reading this…” If you are set on introducing King, Thinner is all right, but I think King’s writing is really best for teens (like 16+) and older.
I read a collection of King’s short stories when I was about 12, and they still haunt me to this day. I also read all these Michael Crichton books and they were much more my style at the time
I definitely agree; Sphere was my favorite book in middle school, but it took me a few more years before I got into Stephen King. You can find a lot of Michael Crichton books at thrift stores - it’s how I found mine back then, and I still see them pretty often today.
Same here, except haven’t really gotten into Stephen King, and my favourite being Andromeda Strain. Sphere was also really good though.
Oh yeah good one, maybe I’ll start there instead.
Great recommendation. I read both Jurassic Park and The Stand around this age. Honestly, I’d give the kid synopses of the books and let them choose what interests them. For me at least, the allure of reading something I was “too young for” led me to a lifelong love of reading that has served me pretty well. Depends on your kid, of course!
IT has child characters which might make it pretty relatable. It’s one of the more frightening options though. If your kid is new to horror, Misery might be a good choice. The Dark Tower series is great and milder on the spookiness. Salem’s Lot is a fun read if kiddo likes vampires. They all have some sexuality discussed, no graphic sex scenes that I can recall. Lots and lots of violence though.
I read the stand in 9th or 10th grade and loved it.
However, Congo was an excellent read when I was younger, too.
Is that around 16/7; years old?
I believe 14 years old. It was a good one!
I would recommend Eyes of the Dragon, The Institute, The Talisman, Fairy Tale, and some of the short story and novella collections. I don’t think you should worry about what is representative of King but what is relatable and good reading for an 11 year old.
I would recommend against Pet Semetary. I read it at around 11 or 12 and was very disturbed by it.
Also The Body by his pseudonym Richard Bachman, in the book Different Seasons, which was remade into the movie Stand By Me.
Oh yeah, great call. That movie was the best thing I’d ever seen even before I was old enough to start reading King.
I was in a book shop today looking at Pet Semetary actually and did decide against it. I’m thinking short story collections might be the way to go.
Gonna echo Eyes of the Dragon, it’s fantasy rather than horror.
Is the Institute book better than the series? Because that ending to season 1 was ass
I really enjoyed the book. I didn’t know there was a TV series at all, but I have a hard time with any dramatic TV/movies with child actors because they just can’t have the depth of experience to act out anything other than silly kid comedy.
I haven’t seen the series but I’ve read the book and really liked it.
I don’t know why these haven’t been mentioned on here but his short story collections are perfect. Night Shift, Skeleton Crew, and Different Seasons. You cover so many great stories in bite-sized chunks.
Yeah they are great! I think they have all been listed but thanks!
The Tailsman.
First Stephen King book I ever read was around that age. Through The Eyes of the Dragon. King wanted to write a medieval fantasy novel for his daughter. Personally, I loved it.
That said, if your kid isn’t afraid of a meaty book, It is also a great choice because it really captures how kids can be isolated for traumatic experiences, but can overcome it together. So in my opinion, that made it really relatable when I read it around the same age. It does have that weird child sex orgy in the middle, but reading King is never a good way to avoid reading fucked up shit.
My personal favourite of King though is the Dark Tower series. The Gunslinger is the smallest entry in the main series, so it’s easily readable.
The first and third option aren’t pure horror like It, but IMO that’s what makes them great, because you get little sprinklings of horror, which can make it creepier because it contrasts (without feeling unnatural) with the rest.
As much as I love Dark Tower, I would never suggest DT books as an entry point in the “Kingverse”. If you’ve read a dozen other books of him (mostly random), you’ll actually have a lot better time starting DT because you’ll be able to pick up certain threads that would otherwise remain invisible.
100% this ^ It’s “good” without the background knowledge but it’s way more interesting if you get a lot of the references.
I didn’t know what The Dark Tower was, I just happened to find the first few in a used book store. It wasn’t until maybe book three that I started recognizing some stuff because I’d read a fair amount of King but over a long stretch of time.
These days I’m reading random ones and understanding more about The Dark Tower. I should probably re-read it sometime soon.
The Eyes of the Dragon is a good option, but it’s not representative of rest of King’s work.
I’m going to suggest “The Talisman”, which was co-written with Peter Straub. It’s a coming-of-age story so there should be some overlap of interest there. It’s more of a dark adventure than a horror book, and it ties in with the Dark Tower saga (but only “after the fact”, so you can read Talisman without any of the other context just fine), but I read it at about that age and it helped me get into a lot of other King books, and eventually, much broader fantasy, sci-fi and horror.
I also seem to remember that it starts somewhat slow, but once you get through that it’s fantastic to the end.
The Eyes of the Dragon pairs nicely with your suggestion!
First King book I read was The Stand. About the same age. Not too scary, good story about good vs evil.
The girl that loved Tom Gordon. It’s not very long has a 9 year old protagonist and even if it wouldn’t have a monster it would be still a page turner.
I think that one is specifically for kids and teens.
Don’t try to force it, just mention you enjoyed reading his books as a kid.
Yeah with this kid, all I need to do is leave a book lying around. But they’ve specifically been asking for horror and are enjoying murder mysteries so far.
For a good murder mystery without the horror try The Colorado Kid. Then watch the show Haven that is loosely based on it.
Thanks, I’ll check it out!
Emphasis on “loosely.”
Yep, Haven is supernatural while the book is not. It’s more about using the mystery of the book to create a whole different (but really intriguing and King-like) world. They are both good in their own way.
I haven’t read this for years and it’s well past time to watch the movie again, but Hearts in Atlantis. IIRC there are no real dark elements except for men in black being vaguely spooky.
I would second the recommendation for Michael Crichton also. Also, H.P. Lovecraft is excellent without being quite as messed up as some of King’s darker horror.
Personally I love short stories, now and as a kid. “The Dunwich Horror,” “Night Shift,” and “Skeleton Crew” would be my recommendations, in increasing order of scaryness.
I read Different Seasons right about that age and it remains one of my favorites to this day. A collection of novella-length stories might be an easier introduction than some of the 900 page doorstops he’s written. I mean, you definitely don’t want to give him The Tommyknockers as his first one.
Oh yeah I remember reading that one, really good!
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