Book cover of Carrie

Book description

Stephen King's legendary debut, about a teenage outcast and the revenge she enacts on her classmates, is a Classic. CARRIE is the novel which set him on the road to the Number One bestselling author King is today.

Carrie White is no ordinary girl.

Carrie White has the gift of…

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Why read it?

14 authors picked Carrie as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?

This was the book that made me realize horror could terrify in a way that felt entirely familiar.

I read it when the cruelty of school was still a raw wound because I understood exactly how laughter is used to flatten a person until they start to disappear. It wasn’t the supernatural elements that stayed with me, but the profound loneliness of a girl shamed into a silence that eventually caught fire.

I finished it with the understanding that a "final snap" is never an accident, but the inevitable result of humiliation accumulating like a slow-burning medicine. King showed me…

You know what any misfit with telekinetic powers should do to her enemies after years of torment culminate into a single act of spiteful cruelty? Carrie does! I love how she gains awareness and control of her abilities. I love how she wields her power against her nasty, dim-witted bullies.

I cheer when she locks the door and slowly walks away, leaving them to their fate. I love how she takes revenge on her vicious mother in a way that flies in the face of her vindictive fundamentalist beliefs. A sweet-natured girl, maligned by an entire community, taking a final,…

From Charlene's list on boundary-pushing badass.

King is the great American mythmaker.

When I first read this book during my miserable high school years, I learned that a writer can take the trauma of adolescence and high school and turn it into mythology. Bullies, Bible-thumpers, and that rare compassionate soul—in this novel, they become cosmic American forces as resonant as Jung’s archetypes.

From Aaron's list on get you out of the box.

If you love Carrie...

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Book cover of Friends Like These

Friends Like These by James V. Irving,

Joth Proctor is an under-employed, criminal defense lawyer based in Arlington, Virginia, where a mix of southern charm, shady business dealings, and Washington, D.C. intrigue pervade the story. Upon the suspicious death of the wife of a close friend, Proctor enters a tangled web of drug and alcohol abuse, real…

I’m one of those readers who sometimes read a book because they have to. I started this book with the idea that I couldn’t possibly miss Stephen King’s debut novel. On paper, it stood at the antipodes of my liking— a horror story, but also a mystery and a thriller, set in a high school and so drenched in blood you might fear staining your finger at each turning page. Yet, I was so absorbed by Carrie’s tormented personality that I forgot all the above and went all the way down to the end in a single breath.

This book…

From Aldo's list on women a notch above the rest.

Leave it to the master of horror, Stephen King, to dream up the ultimate comeuppance story.

High school student Carrie is bullied relentlessly by her peers, both at school and outside its walls. Her mother’s treatment of her at home doesn’t help. But one day Carrie realizes she has supernatural powers that dwarf the “powers” her classmates think they wield over her.

I don’t condone what happens on prom night, of course, but anyone who’s ever been bullied will agree that the fantasy of turning the tables on your tormentor(s) can be…very satisfying.

From Megan's list on bullies being put in their place.

While most people read Stephen King for the paranormal elements, I have always been fascinated by the way he writes his characters.

This is especially true of familial relationships, like the one in Carrie. The prom scene is iconic, but what I keep coming back to is the amount of guilt heaped on Carrie by her religious-fanatic mother. Their relationship sets up everything else in the story.

If Carrie’s mother hadn’t body-shamed her horrifically, then Carrie never would have been so vulnerable in the girl’s locker room.

If you love Stephen King...

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Book cover of Stealing Time

Stealing Time by KJ Waters,

A devastating hurricane. A time travel betrayal. Will Ronnie survive the witch hunt or forever be lost in time?

Stealing Time is the first book in the best-selling "Breathtakingly original" time travel series that will keep you on the edge of your seat.

As Hurricane Charley churns a path of…

Who doesn’t look forward to their high school prom?

Most would anticipate the greatest excitement of the evening to revolve around the crowning of the high school’s king and queen.

But when Carrie White, a friendless, bullied high-school girl from an abusive religious household discovers she has telekinetic powers, all hell breaks loose.

This is a great revenge horror story with plenty of Stephen King’s humor and gore. Pig’s blood is abundant.

Most horror fans have either seen or heard about the movie Carrie, and are aware of the final blood-soaked scene. However, the movie is far less graphic than the novel. Carrie White goes through a lot of physical trauma and mental torture, not only by her abusive mother but also her sadistic classmates, until she finally snaps – exacting revenge on those who tormented her by using her newly found telekinetic powers.

Stephen King’s description of Carrie’s tormentors and his in-depth character development of the repressed, friendless Carrie makes for an intense read, and really makes you want her…

Carrie was Stephen King’s first published novel yet it’s still seen as one of his best. It was an experimental book as it didn’t follow a normal structure, electing to create the story out of snippets from fictional magazines, newspapers, and articles. It’s one of the best revenge stories and focuses on the characters more than the eventual scares. By delving into Carrie’s psyche, as well as the feelings of the bullies around her, Stephen King creates sympathetic characters even when some of them shouldn’t be. Furthermore, Carrie is a parable for the question: what does it cost to be…

If you love Carrie...

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Book cover of A Brush With Death

A Brush With Death by Jody Summers,

Former model Kira McGovern picks up the paint brushes of her youth and through an unexpected epiphany she decides to mix ashes of the deceased with her paints to produce tributes for grieving families.

Unexpectedly this leads to visions and images of the subjects of her work and terrifying changes…

Horror Paranormal: In 1974 when I was 25, Carrie was published as an epistolary novel [presented through a series of newspaper articles, letters, or book excerpts]. I was hooked. Most have probably seen the film adaptations, but there is nothing like reading the book. 

Carrie possesses the powers of telekinesis and telepathy, which she uses to exact revenge on her tormentors (which is the horror part). King quickly draws you into the emotional character of Carrie White. You can feel the girl’s desires, her pain from the bullying, and almost want to cheer when her powers enable her to strike…

From Dannye's list on helping you step outside the box.

If you love Carrie...

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Book cover of Friends Like These

Friends Like These by James V. Irving,

Joth Proctor is an under-employed, criminal defense lawyer based in Arlington, Virginia, where a mix of southern charm, shady business dealings, and Washington, D.C. intrigue pervade the story. Upon the suspicious death of the wife of a close friend, Proctor enters a tangled web of drug and alcohol abuse, real…

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