Stephen King

 

Stephen King in association with amazon.com

  Menu

Stephen King
Home

Stephen King
Biography

Richard Bachman

Best of
Stephen King

Stephen King
Books

Stephen King
e-Books

Stephen King
Movies

Stephen King
Audio Books

Stephen King
Book Sequels

Stephen King
Movie Sequels

Books About
Stephen King

Stephen King
Image Gallery

Collecting
Stephen King

Stephen King
Forum



Stephen KingAdd to Favorites



 

Carrie
by Stephen King
Publisher: Pocket Books
Published: Nov 2002 (Paperback 272 pages)
Published: Mar 1999 (Hardcover 199 pages)

 

 

Read a Chapter

Dedication

First Line

About the Book

Review

 

Paper Back

Hard Cover

 

 

Order the book

Hardcover

Paperback

Library Binding
Related movies

Carrie 1

Carrie 2

Dedication

This is for Tabby, who got me into it -- and then bailed me out of it.

First Line

News item from the Westover (ME) weekly Enterprise, August 19, 1966: 'Rain of Stones Reported: It was reliably reported by several persons that a rain of stones fell from a clear blue sky on Carlin Street in the town of Chamberlain on August 17th.'

About the Book

In one way or another, everybody abused Carrie. This sixteen-year-old misfit was forbidden everything that was young and fun by her fanatical mother. She was teased and taunted by her classmates, misunderstood by her teachers, and given up as hopeless by almost everyone.
But Carrie had a secret: She possessed terrifying telekinetic powers that could make inanimate objects move, a lighted candle fall, or a door lock. Carrie could make all kinds of startling bizarre, and malevolent things happen. And so she did one night, when feeling scorned and humiliated…and growing angrier and angrier…she became the vengeful demon who let the whole town -- and all the people in it -- feel her power.

Review

Why read Carrie? Stephen King himself has said that he finds his early work "raw," and Brian De Palma's movie was so successful that we feel like we have read the novel even if we never have. The simple answer is that this is a very scary story, one that works as well--if not better--on the page as on the screen. Carrie White, menaced by bullies at school and her religious nut of a mother at home, gradually discovers that she has telekinetic powers, powers that will eventually be turned on her tormentors. King has a way of getting under the skin of his readers by creating an utterly believable world that throbs with menace before finally exploding. He builds the tension in this early work by piecing together extracts from newspaper reports, journals, and scientific papers, as well as more traditional first- and third-person narrative in order to reveal what lurks beneath the surface of Chamberlain, Maine.





Top