

The book often reads like a greatest-hits compendium, and not just of King’s own work. But to say that Later is derivative would be an understatement.
#LATER BY STEPHEN KING HOW TO#
King still knows how to populate a story with engaging personae, how to keep the tale moving, and how to be funny and self-aware. Even the best writers exhaust themselves and lapse into self-parody, and some of us now are bound to ask whether the man is producing anything worth reading.īased on his new novel, Later, the answer is yes and no. But King has also unleashed a lot of dross on the world.


Some of his novels are powerful works of the macabre and certain of his early stories-think of “The Last Rung on the Ladder,” “Night Surf,” “Quitters, Inc.,” “The Man Who Loved Flowers,” “The Woman in the Room,” “Nona,” and “Survivor Type”-are resonant, shudder-inducing tales that compare favorably with anything by Salinger or Capote. King adds continually to a vast and uneven corpus of work. Press play to hear a narrated version of this story, presented by AudioHopper. King publishes everything from works of supernatural horror to gritty crime stories to tales marked by Chandleresque melancholy and the social realism of a Russell Banks writing about New England’s losers and sad sacks. Does Stephen King still have it as a writer? The 73-year-old scribe churns out book after book and story after story every year, running circles around younger authors in terms of productivity, not to mention versatility.
