Agree that his early stuff is best. My middle school kid just started with Pet Sematery. That’s what I started with back in the day. I inhaled his stuff as a MS/HS kid in the 80s, but then went off it — I probably overdid it. Or maybe Tommyknockers and Needful Things did me in. I read both, too. My dad convinced me to read 11/22/63 and I really liked it, but never got back into Steven King stuff. |
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I’ve read a ton of Stephen King, starting back in late elementary school and still love his stuff today. Minus Tommyknockers and Needful Things, of course.
I don’t think his early stuff is necessarily better than later, but it is very different. The earlier is more straight horror/supernatural. Of those books, I think the best are Misery, The Shining, Carrie, Cujo, It…. So many good ones. I loved The Stand, but it’s *long* and not what I’d recommend for a first King. Christine is also great. As PPs have said, he has some terrific short story collections, as well. I liked If It Bleeds, which is more recent (The Life of Chuck, especially). All Dark, No Stars is also great but so, so dark. Too dark for a teenager. Of his later books, I love the Bill Hodges/Holly Gibney books. I think of these later books as great storytelling - Billy Summers, 11/22/63, Under the Dome - strong characters and fun to read. The Institute feels like a bit of a throw-back, though I didn’t like it as much as I thought I would. |
+1 Awesome book!! Favorite by far. |
| The Dead Zone was a favorite when I was a teen |
| I read It in 6th grade, big mistake. Then read Needful Things which was wrong on many levels. Amazing how scary written word can be. |
| PP again, also read the Stand as a late tween. |
I absolutely agree. I'd start with Night Shift and Skeleton Crew. |
| + 1 on the Bill/Holly trilogy that starts with Mr Mercedes. |
Doctor Sleep was the sequel. Danny is grown up. |
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The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon if he at all likes sports or baseball.
Salems Lot otherwise |
| Eyes of the Dragon was very good. |
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This is a fun exercise b/c it’s making me think about how different me reading King at 16 is from me reading him now at 40!
Maybe IT or Doctor Sleep? His latest, Holly, is a helluva fun ride, too. Recently I’ve loved Bag of Bones and Duma Key, but these might not resonate so much with a teen. |
Different Seasons is NC-17. I haven't read it since I was a teen but I remember the story of the ex-nazi and there was creepy sex stuff in there. Also one story a pregnant woman is decapitated. I'm not saying teens shouldn't read this, as I obviously did, and it's horror, but the nazi stuff had a dildo and sex experiments with a nun with cut off legs I think. This is all from memory so obvi made an impact! (but I'm a normal, well-adjusted adult! Who still loves to read!) |
I'm the PP who wrote the quoted post above. I agree that Apt Pupil isn't for younger kids, but OP is asking for her 16yo. Also agree/acknowledge that Stephen King has a lot of weird sex stuff (which was I was trying to get at in a spoiler-free way in my comment about It). Definitely weirder and more disturbing/impactful than the more horror-y elements of his stories--to me, anyway. |
| The Shining is arguably his best novel, but probably better for young adults. That said, I agree with the novella recommendations, as well as Christine, It, and Salems Lot. 11/16 is good for more contemporary King, and I actually enjoyed Holly and the Institute as well. |