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Cemetery Dance Publications 37 страница



166 This is the same Matt Kinney King coached in Little League—see Head Down in our

Baseball chapter.

167 The Road to the Dark Tower: Exploring Stephen King’s Magnum Opus by Bev Vincent.

New York, NY: New American Library, 2004.

168 For those who’ve forgotten, the assassination of John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963.

169 Full citations for publications including King material referred to in this chapter appear in

the Bibliography.

170 One cannot help but note a superficial connection to events in King’s novels Desperation

and The Regulators; and his unpublished screenplay The Shotgunners. Perhaps this movie partly

inspired them?

171 Many King experts argue this is in fact an interview or series of quotes rather than an actual

article written by King. A number of King authorities consulted for The Complete Guide to the

Works of Stephen King unanimously agreed with this interpretation. Justin Brooks’ Stephen King: A

Primary Bibliography of the World’s Most Popular Author lists the piece as non-fiction and, to

cover all opinions, we have included it here.

172 Horror Plum’d by Michael R. Collings. Woodstock, Georgia: Overlook Connection Press,

2002, page 504.

173 Christopher Spruce is a brother of Tabitha King and Stephanie Leonard. He both assisted in

editing and published the Castle Rock newsletter; for a period ran WZON, a Bangor radio station

King owns; and published the Bangor, Maine newspaper The Register (see our Miscellany chapter).

174 Stephanie Leonard is a sister of Tabitha King and was, for a number of years, King’s

personal assistant.

175 Goldman penned the screenplays for Misery, Hearts in Atlantis and Dreamcatcher.

176 Also, on 12 April 1984 King appeared on Good Morning America to promote the film

version of Children of the Corn and support Hart’s candidacy.

177 See the Variations and Versions in King’s Fiction chapter of Stephen King: Uncollected,

Unpublished by Rocky Wood with David Rawsthorne and Norma Blackburn. Abingdon, Maryland:

Cemetery Dance Publications, 2006.

178 Romero directed Creepshow and The Dark Half.

179 While King’s logic makes sense the facts are wrong. The Kristallnacht occurred on

November 9, 1938 and into the early hours of November 10. There was a nationwide state-sponsored

pogrom against Jews, synagogues and Jewish businesses in both Germany and Austria but there is no

evidence of book burnings that night. Someone may have pointed at least the date out to King, as in

his I Want to be Typhoid Stevie speech (see Opinion—The Craft of Writing chapter) he concludes:

‘As long as we don’t reach the point where folks are piling so-called subversive books in the

street...and setting them on fire. Family values in Berlin, you understand. Circa 1938.’

180 Kansas City, MO: Andrews and McMeel, September 1989, pages 51 and 53-56. A

transcription of the Question and Answer session following the speech appears on pages 56-61.

181 McSweeney’s has published King short fiction, including The Tale of Gray Dick and Lisey

and the Madman.

182 Rocky Wood, David Rawsthorne and Norma Blackburn. Melbourne, Australia: Kanrock

Partners, 2003 and 2004.

183 Rocky Wood with David Rawsthorne and Norma Blackburn. Abingdon, Maryland:

Cemetery Dance Publications, 2006.

184 On Writing. New York, NY: Scribner, 2000, subsection 19 of the C.V. section.

185 King correctly identifies the newspaper in this article as The Enterprise but changed it in

On Writing to the incorrect Lisbon Weekly Enterprise. In the Notes to Nightmares & Dreamscapes

he identifies it as ‘the weekly Lisbon Enterprise’. See also the footnote in our Danse Macabre, On

Writing chapter.

186 Subsection 19 of the C.V. section.

187 ‘Mr. Ricker, the college-track English teacher (and the school’s most urbane faculty member

—he looked quite a bit like Craig Stevens in Peter Gunn), became Cow Man because his family

owned Ricker Dairy.’

188 The Kings’ oldest son is Joseph Hillstrom King. His pseudonym as a published writer is

‘Joe Hill’. His official website is www.joehillfiction.com/.

189 One King remembers vividly is ‘the hanged man’ dream—see his Garbage Truck column



for December 18, 1969; and our Danse Macabre, On Writing chapter.

190 King underestimates his own skill. Anyone who has ever stood in a location they know is

described in a King book (for instance parts of Durham portrayed in ’ Salem’s Lot) knows how

brilliantly he can deliver the visual as description.

191 This is an error. King was born on September 21, 1947, and was 50 from September 21,

1997 to September 20, 1998. As one imagines he knew that (!), it was probably a typographical error

at the Newsletter.

192 These tales were originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction:

The Gunslinger (October 1978); The Way Station (April 1980); The Oracle and the Mountains

(February 1981); The Slow Mutants (July 1981); and The Gunslinger and the Dark Man (November

1981).

193 See The Strange Case of the Westlake Stationery in our Introducing the Work of Others

chapter.

194 King wrote these pieces about Hunter/McBain: On Ed McBain and an untitled piece in a

memorial booklet after his death (both covered in this chapter).

195 King also wrote an introduction to Thompson’s novels, Now and On Earth— Big Jim

Thompson: An Appreciation; and The Killer Inside Me—Introduction: WARNING! WARNING!

Hitch-hikers May Be Escaped LUNATICS! (both covered in our Introducing the Work of Others

chapter).

196 Full citations for publications including King material referred to in this chapter appear in

the Bibliography.

197 ‘… evidently an editor at Viking Penguin’, according to Tyson Blue, in Of New Frontiers

and Gargoyles, a review of Nightmares in the Sky in Castle Rock: The Stephen King Newsletter for

November 1988, page 3.

198 Ibid.

199 Horror Plum’d by Michael R. Collings. Woodstock, Georgia: Overlook Connection Press,

2002, page 273.

200 The Lost Work of Stephen King by Stephen Spignesi. Secaucus, New Jersey: Birch Lane

Press, 1998, page 232.

201 (sic), as published in the original newsletter.

202 King’s first attempt at original series television Golden Years, was cancelled after episode

7 of a 13-episode commitment. Several attempts to finish the series failed and it was eventually

released on video in a condensed version and with an alternate ending written by Josef Anderson.

203 Author of the King tie-in book, The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer.

204 In the Dark Tower mythology the slightly differently named Claudia y Inez Bachman wrote

one version of the book Charlie the Choo-Choo. According to Susannah Dean this made her part of

the Ka-Tet of Nineteen. The Stephen King character in Song of Susannah told Eddie Dean and

Roland Deschain that Claudia was the wife of Richard Bachman.

205 This piece was revised before final inclusion in the novel, see Stephen King: Uncollected,

Unpublished for more detail.

206 This is also the premise of King’s short story, It Grows On You, first published in 1973.

207 Rocky Wood with David Rawsthorne and Norma Blackburn. Abingdon, Maryland:

Cemetery Dance Publications, 2006.

208 Stephen King: Lisbon High’s Most Celebrated Alumnus by Ambra S Watkins, Lisbon

Monthly (November 1986), page 5.

209 King writes, ‘This has been Hollywood’s scary summer...’; names movies such as Alien,

Prophecy, The Dawn of the Dead and The Amityville Horror; and says Kubrick’s The Shining will

be in movie theatres the following spring. See The Horrors of ’79 in our Opinion—Radio, Music,

Film and Television chapter for likely confirmation of 1979 as the date this manuscript was written.

210 King and Straub would later combine to write The Talisman and Black House.

211 According to King expert Stephen Spignesi, in personal correspondence with Justin Brooks.

212 Stephen King: The Art of Darkness by Douglas Winter. New York, NY: New American

Library, 1986, pages 24-25.

213 Ibid, page 231.

214 Ibid, pages 236-237.

215 The Stephen King Story by George Beahm. Kansas City, MO: Andrews and McMeel, 1991,

page 265.

2 1 6 Stephen King: Man and Artist by Carroll F. Terrell. Orono, ME: Northern Lights

Publishing Company, 1990.

217 Marsh and King were both members of the ‘literary’ band The Rock Bottom Remainders

(see The Neighborhood of the Beast in our Miscellany chapter).

218 In Tyson Blue’s The Unseen King (Mercer Island, WA: Starmont House, 1989, page 156)

he states ‘they were recorded in 1984’, but this appears to be an error.

219 Ibid, page 156.

220 See our Miscellany chapter.

221 See our Opinion—Radio, Music, Film and Television chapter.

222 Posted February 27, 2006.

BIBLIOGRAPHY AND INDEX

 

 

Notes

 

The page number on which we begin our review of each piece is indicated to the left of each

entry (e.g., the review of Danse Macabre begins on page47).

Pagination is provided for entries only where this is available.

Certain information, such as ISBNs, are not available or independently confirmed and are

therefore not listed below.

ISBNs are not listed here for short non-fiction in King’s novels and collections (those

requiring this information will find it in Stephen King: A Primary Bibliography of the World’s Most

Popular Author by Justin Brooks. Abingdon, Maryland: Cemetery Dance Publications, 2006).

Where a piece of non-fiction appears in a King novel or collection only the first entry is

listed below (those requiring complete information for each publication will find it in Stephen

King: A Primary Bibliography of the World’s Most Popular Author by Justin Brooks).

The authors would appreciate any updates to this information being forwarded to us via the

publisher.

 

Section I: Book-Length Works

 

Danse Macabre—

 

47 Publication history:

1. New York, NY: Everest House, 1981, 400 pp., hardcover. ISBN: 0-89696-076-5.

2. New York, NY: Everest House, 1981, 400 pp., hardcover. ISBN: 0-89696-076-5. Limited

edition of 250 numbered copies, signed by the author.

2a. New York, NY: Everest House, 1981, 400 pp., hardcover. ISBN: 0-89696-076-5. Limited

edition of 15 lettered copies, signed by the author. These were originally intended for private

distribution.

2b. New York, NY: Everest House, 1981, 400 pp., hardcover. ISBN: 0-89696-076-5. 35

unsigned “publisher’s state” copies.

3. New York, NY: Book of the Month Club [n. d.], 400 pp., hardcover. No ISBN.

4. Excerpted in Playboy (with subsequent reprints in other publications) in January, 1981.

—“Why We Crave Horror Movies”

5. Excerpted in Quest in June, 1981.—“Notes on Horror”

6. London, England: Macdonald Futura Publishers, July 1981, 400 pp., hardcover. ISBN: 0-354-

04646-2.

7. London, England: Macdonald Futura Publishers, July 1981, 400 pp., trade paperback. ISBN:

0-354-04647-0.

8. Excerpted in Book Digest in September, 1981.—“Danse Macabre”

9. Excerpted in Self in September, 1981. —“The Healthy Power of a Good Scream”

10. Excerpted in TV Guide in December, 1981.—“The Sorry State of TV Shows: You Gotta Put

on the Gruesome Mask and Go Booga-Booga”

11. New York, NY: Berkley Books, May 1982, xiv+400 pp., trade paperback. ISBN: 0-425-

05345-8.

12. London, England: Futura Publications, A Division of Macdonald & Co., 1982, 480 pp.,

mass-market paperback. ISBN: 0-7088-2181-2. Note: Reprinted in 1984. This edition does not

contain the “Forenote to the Paperback Edition” carried in the Berkley Books mass-market

paperback.

13. New York, NY: Berkley Books, December 1983, xxi+437 pp., mass-market paperback.

ISBN: 0-425-06462-X. ISBN: 0-425-07984-8. ISBN: 0-451-0433-8. Note: This edition includes

King’s “Forenote to the Paperback Edition” piece.

14. New York, NY: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1983, pp., hardcover. ISBN:. Note: A limited edition

of [25?] slipcased copies given to sales department personnel at Everest House.

15. Excerpted in 1983/1984 Fiction Writer’s Market in 1983.—“Last Waltz: Horror and

Morality, Horror and Magic”

16. Excerpted in The Open Door: When Writers First Learned to Read in 1989. —“Stephen

King”

17. Excerpted as a broadsheet in 1990.—“Danse Macabre”

18. London, England: Warner Books UK, 1992, 479 pp., mass-market paperback. ISBN: 0-

7515-0437-8.

19. Excerpted in “They’re Here…”: Invasion of the Bodysnatchers: A Tribute in 1999.

—“Invasion of the Bodysnatchers”

20. Excerpted in My Favorite Horror Story in 2000.—[Untitled]

21. Excerpted in Secret Windows in 2000.—“Horror Fiction: From Danse Macabre”

22. New York, NY: Berkley Books, September 2001, xiv+400 pp., trade paperback. ISBN: 0-

425-18160-X.

23. London, England: TimeWarner, 2002. 479 pp., mass-market paperback. ISBN: 0-7515-

0437-8.

24. Excerpted in Rosemary’s Baby in [March] 2003.—“Introduction”

25. Excerpted in The Haunting of Hill House in [March] 2003.—“Introduction”

26. Excerpted in Ghost Story in [March] 2003.—“Introduction”

27. Excerpted in The McGraw-Hill Reader: Issues Across the Disciplines, Eighth Edition in

2003.—“My Creature from the Black Lagoon”

28. Excerpted in The House Next Door in 2004.—“Introduction”

 

Nightmares in the Sky—

 

384 Publication history:

1. Excerpted in Penthouse in September, 1988.—“Stephen King’s Nightmares in the Sky”

2. New York, NY: Viking Studio Books, November 1988, 128 pp., hardcover. Text by Stephen

King; photographs by f-Stop Fitzgerald. ISBN: 0-670-82307-4.

3. London, England: Viking Penguin Inc., and Penguin Books Ltd., November 1988, 128 pp.,

hardcover. Text by Stephen King, photographs by f-Stop Fitzgerald. ISBN: 0-670-82307-4.

 

On Writing—

 

60 Publication history:

1. A pre-publication excerpt was published online in December 1999 as “Selections from On

Writing.”—“Selections from On Writing”

2. Excerpted in The New Yorker in June, 2000.—“On Impact”

3. New York, NY: Scribner, [October] 2000, 288 pp., hardcover. ISBN: 0-684-85352-3.

4. London, England: Hodder & Stoughton, [October] 2000, 384 pp., hardcover. ISBN: 0-340-

76996-3.

5. New York, NY: Scribner, 2000, 431 pp., hardcover. ISBN: 0-743-20436-0. Large print

edition.

6. New York, NY: Pocket Books, June 2001, 288 pp., trade paperback. ISBN: 0-671-02425-6.

7. London, England: New English Library, September 2001, xv+367 pp., mass-market

paperback. ISBN: 0-340-76998-X. Note: This edition includes “Jumper” by Garrett Addams, the

winning story in the United Kingdom On Writing competition.

8. London, England: New English Library, September 2001, xv+367 pp., trade paperback.

ISBN: 0-340-82046-2. Note: This edition includes “Jumper” by Garrett Addams, the winning story in

the United Kingdom On Writing competition.

9. New York, NY: Pocket Books, July 2002, xix+297 pp., mass-market paperback. ISBN: 0-

7434-5596-7.

10. Excerpted in Life: The Observer Magazine in September, 2000.—“The Early Years…”

11. Excerpted in Life: The Observer Magazine in September, 2000.—“The Accident”

12. Excerpted in Life: The Observer Magazine in October, 2000.—“How to Write”

13. Excerpted in National Post in October, 2000.—“Attention Zestful Writers”

14. Excerpted in Reader’s Digest in January, 2001.—“Before He Was Stephen King”

15. Excerpted in Writer’s Digest in April, 2001. —“How to Write 10 Pages a Day”

16. Excerpted in Writer’s Yearbook 2001 in 2001.—“Getting Back to Work”

17. Excerpted in The Writer in January, 2002.—“Plotting Gets You Nowhere”

18. Excerpted in White Lines: Writers on Cocaine in December 2002.—“From On Writing”

19. Excerpted in Strategies for College Writing: A Rhetorical Reader, Second Edition in 2003.

—“On Reading and Writing”

20. Excerpted in Guys Write for Guys Read in May 2005.—“From On Writing”

21. Excerpted in Writing for Teens in October, 2005.—“A Ten-Minute Writing Lesson”

22. Excerpted in The Stephen King Desk Calendar 2006 in [October] 2005.—“Stephen King’s

Library”

23. Excerpted in The New Millennium Reader, Fourth Edition in 2006.—“On Writing”

 

Faithful: Two Diehard Boston Red Sox Fans Chronicle the 2004 Season—

 

70 Publication history:

1. New York, NY: Scribner, 2004, 409+[5] pp., hardcover. ISBN: 0-7432-6752-4.

2. Excerpted in Boston in December, 2004.—“The Comeback”

3. London, England: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, Orion Publishing Co., 2005, 384 pp., hardcover.

ISBN: 0-297-85063-6.

4. Thorndike, ME: Thorndike Press, March 2005, 807 pp., hardcover. ISBN: 0-7862-7422-0.

Large print edition.

5. New York: NY: Scribner, [August] 2005, 445 pp., trade paperback. ISBN: 0-7432-6753-2.

Note: This edition features an index, a new essay by Stewart O’Nan and a reprint of King’s “It’s

Weird But True: The Gloom is Gone in Mudville.”

 

Section II: Short Non-Fiction

 

[Letter]—

 

295Locus (March, 1998): 70.

 

[Title unknown]—

 

348The Enterprise [weekly newspaper; Lisbon Falls, Maine] (1964). Note: King’s articles

only appeared in the local (Lisbon Falls, Maine) edition of the newspaper, not the statewide edition.

 

[Title unknown]—

 

348The Enterprise [weekly newspaper; Lisbon Falls, Maine] (1964). Note: King’s articles

only appeared in the local (Lisbon Falls, Maine) edition of the newspaper, not the statewide edition.

 

[Title unknown]—

 

281 Appearances:

1. The Maine Times (March [?], 1976).

2. As “Constant Reader: Gone to the Movies” in Coda: Poets & Writers Newsletter Volume 4,

Number 2 (November/December, 1976): 20.

 

[Title unknown]—

 

382The Register [newspaper run by King’s brother-in-law Christopher Spruce; Bangor, Maine]

(May 11, 1988)

 

[Title unknown]—

 

382The Register [newspaper run by King’s brother-in-law Christopher Spruce; Bangor, Maine]

(May 18, 1988)

 

[Title unknown]—

 

382The Register [newspaper run by King’s brother-in-law Christopher Spruce; Bangor, Maine]

(May 25, 1988)

 

[Title unknown]—

 

382 Appearances:

1. The Register [newspaper run by King’s brother-in-law Christopher Spruce; Bangor, Maine]

(June 1, 1988)

 

[Title unknown]—

 

397le nouvel Observateur [France] Special Edition (November, 1994).

 

[Untitled]—

 

279TV Guide (July 13-19, 1968): A-2.

 

[Untitled]—

 

112The Shining, by Stephen King. Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Co., 1977, hardcover, [no

pagination at the beginning of the book].

 

[Untitled]—

 

353Dreamworks [“an interdisciplinary quarterly on the art of dreaming,” published New York:

Human Sciences Press and Los Angeles: Occidental College] Vol. 1, No. 4 (Summer, 1981): 325.

 

[Untitled]—

 

283Dark Horizons No. 26 (Spring, 1983): 37.

 

[Untitled]—

 

123Satyricon II Program Book, edited by Rusty Burke. Knoxville, TN: Satyricon

II/DeepSouthCon XXI, June 1983, trade paperback, [p. 42].

 

[Untitled]—

 

284The Bewilderbeast [“fanzine”] No. 5 (1984): 33.

 

[Untitled]—

 

374Bangor Daily News (October 31, 1986): 17.

 

[Untitled]—

 

131Misery, by Stephen King. New York: Viking, [June] 1987, hardcover, [no pagination at the

beginning of the book].

 

[Untitled]—

 

131The Tommyknockers, by Stephen King. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, [November] 1987,

hardcover, p. 6.

[Untitled]—

 

289The Bangor Review [free weekly newspaper; Bangor, Maine] (December 23-29, 1987): 2.

 

[Untitled]—

 

289Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror—The World of Forrest J. Ackerman at Auction—

Guernsey’s. New York, New York: Guernsey’s, [December] 1987, paperback, p. 22. No ISBN.

 

[Untitled]—

 

290Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror—The World of Forrest J. Ackerman at Auction—

Guernsey’s. New York, New York: Guernsey’s, [December] 1987, paperback, p. 48. No ISBN.

 

[Untitled]—

 

142Gerald’s Game, by Stephen King. New York: Viking [ABA (American Booksellers

Association) edition], [May] 1992, hardcover [no pagination at the beginning of the book].

 

[Untitled]—

 

391 Appearances:

1. Locus (October, 1992): 70-71. Note: King’s contribution is part of a longer article with other

contributors.

2. As “Fritz Leiber” in Gummitch and Friends, Special Edition, by Fritz Leiber. Hampton

Falls, NH: Donald M. Grant, Publisher, 1992, hardcover, p. 27-29. ISBN: 1-880418-18-5. Deluxe

limited edition of 1,000 numbered copies, signed by Margo Skinner Leiber and artist Rodger

Gerberding. This deluxe limited edition of this book includes 36 pages of tributes by King and others

that are not available in the trade edition. Note: King’s contribution is part of a longer article with

other contributors.

3. As “A World Without Fritz” in Nebula Awards 28: SFWA’s Choices for the Best Science

Fiction and Fantasy of the Year, edited by James Morrow. New York: Harcourt, Brace, & Co.,

1994, hardcover, p. 101-103. ISBN: 0-15-100082-4.

3a. As “A World Without Fritz” in Nebula Awards 28: SFWA’s Choices for the Best Science

Fiction and Fantasy of the Year, edited by James Morrow. New York: Harvest Books, A Division

of Harcourt, Brace, & Co., April 1994, trade paperback, p. 101-103. ISBN: 0-15-600039-3.

 

[Untitled]—

 

315ReKooperation—A Nonverbal Scenic Selection of Soul Souvenirs, by Al Kooper. New

York: BMG/MusicMasters, [February] 1994, p. 4-6. [Compact disc; printed in album sleeve].

 

[Untitled]—

 

396 Appearances:

1. alt.books.stephen-king [Internet newsgroup] (October 6, 1994).

2. The Lost Work of Stephen King: A Guide to Unpublished Manuscripts, Story Fragments,

Alternative Versions and Oddities, by Stephen J. Spignesi. New York: Birch Lane Press, An Imprint

of Carol Publishing, 1998, hardcover, p. 285-286. ISBN: 1-55972-469-2.

2a. The Lost Work of Stephen King: A Guide to Unpublished Manuscripts, Story Fragments,

Alternative Versions and Oddities: Complete & Uncut Edition, by Stephen J. Spignesi. Woodstock,

GA: Overlook Connection Press, 1998, hardcover, p. 337-338. ISBN: 0-892950-03-0. Limited

edition of 1,000 numbered copies, signed by the author, Tyson Blue, and James Cole.

2b. The Lost Work of Stephen King: A Guide to Unpublished Manuscripts, Story Fragments,

Alternative Versions, and Oddities: Complete & Uncut Edition, by Stephen J. Spignesi. Woodstock,

GA: Overlook Connection Press, 1998, hardcover, p. 337-338. Limited edition of 52 lettered copies,

with slipcase, signed by the author, Tyson Blue, and James Cole.

2c. The Lost Work of Stephen King: A Guide to Unpublished Manuscripts, Story Fragments,

Alternative Versions and Oddities, by Stephen J. Spignesi. New York, NY: Citadel Press, June

2002, trade paperback, p. 285-286. ISBN: 0-8065-2390-5.

 

[Untitled]—

 

314 Appearances:

1. Night of the Living Dead: 25thAnniversary Collector’s Edition. 1994. [Laser disc; printed

in liner notes.]

2. Night of the Living Dead: Millennium Edition. Elite Entertainment, [March] 2002. [DVD;

printed in liner notes].

 

[Untitled]—

 

316Michael McDermott, by Michael McDermott. New York: EMD/Capitol, [February] 1996,

[no pagination]. [Compact disc; printed in album sleeve].

 

[Untitled]—

 

150The Dark Tower IV: An Excerpt from the Upcoming Wizard and Glass: A Gift from

Stephen King. New York: Penguin Books USA, [Fall] 1996, mini-paperback, [i]. Note: This is a

promotional booklet that was given away with purchase of the hardcover editions of both

Desperation and The Regulators.

 

[Untitled]—

 

401 Appearances:

1. alt.books.stephen-king [Internet newsgroup] (November 21, 1996).

2. Phantasmagoria [Stephen King “fanzine”] #4 (March, 1997): 5.

3. The Lost Work of Stephen King: A Guide to Unpublished Manuscripts, Story Fragments,

Alternative Versions and Oddities, by Stephen J. Spignesi. New York: Birch Lane Press, An Imprint

of Carol Publishing, 1998, hardcover, p. 287-288. ISBN: 1-55972-469-2.

3a. The Lost Work of Stephen King: A Guide to Unpublished Manuscripts, Story Fragments,

Alternative Versions and Oddities: Complete & Uncut Edition, by Stephen J. Spignesi. Woodstock,

GA: Overlook Connection Press, 1998, hardcover, p. 338-340. ISBN: 0-892950-03-0. Limited

edition of 1,000 numbered copies, signed by the author, Tyson Blue, and James Cole.

3b. The Lost Work of Stephen King: A Guide to Unpublished Manuscripts, Story Fragments,

Alternative Versions and Oddities: Complete & Uncut Edition, by Stephen J. Spignesi. Woodstock,

GA: Overlook Connection Press, 1998, hardcover, p. 338-340. Limited edition of 52 lettered copies,

signed by the author, Tyson Blue, and James Cole.

3c. The Lost Work of Stephen King: A Guide to Unpublished Manuscripts, Story Fragments,

Alternative Versions and Oddities, by Stephen J. Spignesi. New York, NY: Citadel Press, June

2002, trade paperback, p. 287-288. ISBN: 0-8065-2390-5.

4. The Road to the Dark Tower: Exploring Stephen King’s Magnum Opus, by Bev Vincent.

New York, NY: New American Library, September 2004, trade paperback, p. 17-18. ISBN: 0-

45121304-1.

4 a. The Road to the Dark Tower, by Bev Vincent. Baltimore, MD: Cemetery Dance

Publications, 2005, hardcover, p. 30-31. ISBN: 1-58767-104-2. Limited edition of 1,000 numbered

copies, signed by the author.

4 b. The Road to the Dark Tower, by Bev Vincent. Baltimore, MD: Cemetery Dance

Publications, 2005, hardcover, p. 30-31. ISBN: 1-58767-104-2. Limited edition of 52 lettered

copies, signed by the author.

 

[Untitled]—

 

271The Church of Dead Girls, by Stephen Dobyns. New York: Metropolitan Books, A

Division of Henry Holt and Company, Inc., March 1997, paperback, p. [1-3]. Advance Reading

Copy.

[Untitled]—

151TV Guide (April 26-May 2, 1997): 22.

 

[Untitled]—

 

153 Appearances:

1. KING etc. London: A BOOKS etc. publication, in association with Hodder & Stoughton,

[August] 1998, paperback, [no pagination at the beginning of the book]. A free promotional book.

2. Bag of Bones, by Stephen King. London: Hodder & Stoughton, [Summer] 1998, trade

paperback with slipcase, [no pagination at the beginning of the book]. Advance Reader’s Copy. Note:

Only 200 copies were printed.

3. Bag of Bones: A Preview. New York, NY: Scribner, [Fall 1998], paperback, p. 1. No ISBN.

[Expanded version] Note: This is a promotional “limited edition collector’s magazine” which also

includes an excerpt from King’s novel Bag of Bones and an interview.

4. This letter was sent out to various booksellers as a promotion. Fall 1998.

5. This letter also appeared as “Letter from King” on Simon & Schuster’s official web site. Fall

1998.


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