The Shining
The Shining book cover

The Shining

Hardcover – May 1, 1990

Price
$23.86
Format
Hardcover
Pages
450
Publisher
Doubleday
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0385121675
Dimensions
6.41 x 1.4 x 9.54 inches
Weight
1.62 pounds

Description

“A master storyteller.” — Los Angeles Times “Scary! . . . Serves up horrors at a brisk, unflagging pace.” — The New York Times “This chilling novel will haunt you, and make your blood run cold and your heart race with fear.” — Nashville Banner “Guaranteed to frighten you into fits. . . . with a climax that is literally explosive.” — Cosmopolitan “The most wonderfully gruesome man on the planet.” — USA Today “An undisputed master of suspense and terror.” — The Washington Post “[King] probably knows more about scary goings-on in confined, isolated places than anybody since Edgar Allan Poe.” — Entertainment Weekly “He’s the author who can always make the improbable so scary you’ll feel compelled to check the locks on the front door.” — The Boston Globe “Peerless imagination.” — The Observer (London) STEPHEN KING is the author of more than sixty books, all of them worldwide bestsellers. His recent work includes If It Bleeds , The Institute , Elevation, The Outsider , Sleeping Beauties (cowritten with his son Owen King), and the Bill Hodges trilogy: End of Watch , Finders Keepers , and Mr. Mercedes (an Edgar Award winner for Best Novel and an AT&T Audience Network original television series). His novel 11/22/63 was named a top ten book of 2011 by The New York Times Book Review and won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Mystery/Thriller. His epic works The Dark Tower , It, Pet Sematary , and Doctor Sleep are the basis for major motion pictures, with It now the highest grossing horror film of all time. He is the recipient of the 2018 PEN America Literary Service Award, the 2014 National Medal of Arts, and the 2003 National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters. He lives in Bangor, Maine, with his wife, novelist Tabitha King. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Excerpted from Chapter One Jack Torrance thought: Officious little prick. Ullman stood five-five, and when he moved, it was with the prissy speed that seems to be the exclusive domain of all small plump men. The part in his hair was exact, and his dark suit was sober but comforting. I am a man you can bring your problems to, that suit said to the paying customer. To the hired help it spoke more curtly: This had better be good, you. There was a red carnation in the lapel, perhaps so that no one on the street wouldmistake Stuart Ullman for the local undertaker. As he listened to Ullman speak, Jack admitted to himself that he probably could not have liked any man on that side of the desk—under the circumstances. Ullman had asked a question he hadn’t caught. That was bad; Ullman was the type of man who would file such lapses away in a mental Rolodex for later consideration. “I’m sorry?” “I asked if your wife fully understood what you would be taking on here. And there’s your son, of course.” He glanced down at the application in front of him. “Daniel. Your wife isn’t a bit intimidated by the idea?”“Wendy is an extraordinary woman.” “And your son is also extraordinary?” Jack smiled, a big wide PR smile. “We like to think so, I suppose. He’s quite self-reliant for a five-year-old.” No returning smile from Ullman. He slipped Jack’s application back into a file. The file went into a drawer. The desk top was now completely bare except for a blotter, a telephone, a Tensor lamp, and an in/out basket. Both sides of the in/out were empty, too.Ullman stood up and went to the file cabinet in the corner. “Step around the desk, if you will, Mr. Torrance. We’ll look at the hotel floor plans.”He brought back five large sheets and set them down on the glossy walnut plane of the desk. Jack stood by his shoulder, very much aware of the scent of Ullman’s cologne. All my men wear English Leather or they wear nothing at all came into his mind for no reason at all, and he had to clamp his tongue between his teeth to keep in a bray of laughter. Beyond the wall, faintly, came the sounds of the Overlook Hotel’s kitchen, gearing down from lunch.“Top floor,” Ullman said briskly. “The attic. Absolutely nothing up there now but bric-a-brac. The Overlook has changed hands several times since World War II and it seems that each successive manager has put everything they don’t want up in the attic. I want rattraps and poison bait sowed around in it. Some of the third-floor chambermaids say they have heard rustling noises. I don’t believe it, not for a moment, but there mustn’t even be that one-in-a-hundred chance that a single rat inhabits the Overlook Hotel.”Jack, who suspected that every hotel in the world had a rat or two, held his tongue.“Of course you wouldn’t allow your son up in the attic under any circumstances.”“No,” Jack said, and flashed the big PR smile again. Humiliating situation. Did this officious little prick actually think he would allow his son to goof around in a rattrap attic full of junk furniture and God knew what else?Ullman whisked away the attic floor plan and put it on the bottom of the pile.“The Overlook has one hundred and ten guest quarters,” he said in a scholarly voice. “Thirty of them, all suites, are here on the third floor. Ten in the west wing (including the Presidential Suite), ten in the center, ten more in the east wing. All of them command magnificent views.”Could you at least spare the salestalk?But he kept quiet. He needed the job.Ullman put the third floor on the bottom of the pile and they studied the second floor.“Forty rooms,” Ullman said, “thirty doubles and ten singles. And on the first floor, twenty of each. Plus three linen closets on each floor, and a storeroom which is at the extreme east end of the hotel on the second floor and the extreme west end on the first. Questions?”Jack shook his head. Ullman whisked the second and first floors away.“Now. Lobby level. Here in the center is the registration desk. Behind it are the offices. The lobby runs for eighty feet in either direction from the desk. Over here in the west wing is the Overlook Dining Room and the Colorado Lounge. The banquet and ballroom facility is in the east wing. Questions?”“Only about the basement,” Jack said. “For the winter caretaker, that’s the most important level of all. Where the action is, so to speak.”“Watson will show you all that. The basement floor plan is on the boiler room wall.” He frowned impressively, perhaps to show that as manager, he did not concern himself with such mundane aspects of the Overlook’s operation as the boiler and the plumbing. “Might not be a bad idea to put some traps down there too. Just a minute...”He scrawled a note on a pad he took from his inner coat pocket (each sheet bore the legend From the Desk of Stuart Ullman in bold black script), tore it off, and dropped it into the out basket. It sat there looking lonesome. The pad disappeared back into Ullman’s jacket pocket like the conclusion of a magician’s trick. Now you see it, Jacky-boy, now you don’t. This guy is a real heavyweight.They had resumed their original positions, Ullman behind the desk and Jack in front of it, interviewer and interviewee, supplicant and reluctant patron. Ullman folded his neat little hands on the desk blotter and looked directly at Jack, a small, balding man in a banker’s suit and a quiet gray tie. The flower in his lapel was balanced off by a small lapel pin on the other side. It read simply STAFFxa0 in small gold letters.“I’ll be perfectly frank with you, Mr. Torrance. Albert Shockley is a powerful man with a large interest in the Overlook, which showed a profit this season for the first time in its history. Mr. Shockley also sits on the Board of Directors, but he is not a hotel man and he would be the first to admit this. But he has made his wishes in this caretaking matter quite obvious. He wants you hired. I will do so. But if I had been given a free hand in this matter, I would not have taken you on.”Jack’s hands were clenched tightly in his lap, working against each other, sweating. Officious little prick, officious little prick, officious—“I don’t believe you care much for me, Mr. Torrance. I don’t care. Certainly your feelings toward me play no part in my own belief that you are not right for the job. During the season that runs from May fifteenth to September thirtieth, the Overlook employs one hun- dred and ten people full-time; one for every room in the hotel, you might say. I don’t think many of them like me and I suspect that some of them think I’m a bit of a bastard. They would be correct in their judgment of my character. I have to be a bit of a bastard to run this hotel in the manner it deserves.”He looked at Jack for comment, and Jack flashed the PR smile again, large and insultingly toothy.Ullman said: “The Overlook was built in the years 1907 to 1909. The closest town is Sidewinder, forty miles east of here over roads that are closed from sometime in late October or November until sometime in April. A man named Robert Townley Watson built it, the grandfather of our present maintenance man. Vanderbilts have stayed here, and Rockefellers, and Astors, and Du Ponts. Four Presidents have stayed in the Presidential Suite. Wilson, Harding, Roosevelt, and Nixon.”“I wouldn’t be too proud of Harding and Nixon,” Jack murmured.Ullman frowned but went on regardless. “It proved too much for Mr. Watson, and he sold the hotel in 1915. It was sold again in 1922, in 1929, in 1936. It stood vacant until the end of World War II, when it was purchased and completely renovated by Horace Derwent, millionaire inventor, pilot, film producer, and entrepreneur.”“I know the name,” Jack said.“Yes. Everything he touched seemed to turn to gold... except the Overlook. He funneled over a million dollars into it before the first postwar guest ever stepped through its doors, turning a decrepit relic into a show- place. It was Derwent who added the roque court I saw you admiring when you arrived.”“Roque? ”“A British forebear of our croquet, Mr. Torrance. Croquet is bastardized roque. According to legend, Derwent learned the game from his social secretary and fell completely in love with it. Ours may be the finest roque court in America.”“I wouldn’t doubt it,” Jack said gravely. A roque court, a topiary full of hedge animals out front, what next? A life-sized Uncle Wiggily game behind the equipment shed? He was getting very tired of Mr. Stuart Ullman, but he could see that Ullman wasn’t done. Ullman was going to have his say, every last word of it. “When he had lost three million, Derwent sold it to a group of California investors. Their experience with the Overlook was equally bad. Just not hotel people.“In 1970, Mr. Shockley and a group of his associates bought the hotel and turned its management over to me. We have also run in the red for several years, but I’m happy to say that the trust of the present owners in me has never wavered. Last year we broke even. And this year the Overlook’s accounts were written in black ink for the first time in almost seven decades.”Jack supposed that this fussy little man’s pride was justified, and then his original dislike washed over him again in a wave.He said: “I see no connection between the Overlook’s admittedly colorful history and your feeling that I’m wrong for the post, Mr. Ullman.”“One reason that the Overlook has lost so much money lies in the depreciation that occurs each winter. It shortens the profit margin a great deal more than you might believe, Mr. Torrance. The winters are fantastically cruel. In order to cope with the problem, I’ve installed a full-time winter caretaker to run the boiler and to heat different parts of the hotel on a daily rotating basis. To repair breakage as it occurs and to do repairs, so the elements can’t get a foothold. To be constantly alert to any and every contingency. During our first winter I hired a family instead of a single man. There was a tragedy. A horrible tragedy.”Ullman looked at Jack coolly and appraisingly.“I made a mistake. I admit it freely. The man was a drunk.”Jack felt a slow, hot grin—the total antithesis of the toothy PR grin—stretch across his mouth. “Is that it? I’m surprised Al didn’t tell you. I’ve retired.”“Yes, Mr. Shockley told me you no longer drink. He also told me about your last job... your last position of trust, shall we say? You were teaching English in a Vermont prep school. You lost your temper, I don’t believe I need to be any more specific than that. But I do happen to believe that Grady’s case has a bearing, and that is why I have brought the matter of your... uh, previous history into the conversation. During the winter of 1970–71, after we had refurbished the Overlook but before our first season, I hired this... this unfortunate named Delbert Grady. He moved into the quarters you and your wife and son will be sharing. He had a wife and two daughters. I had reservations, the main ones being the harshness of the winter season and the fact that the Gradys would be cut off from the outside world for five to six months.”“But that’s not really true, is it? There are telephones here, and probably a citizen’s band radio as well. And the Rocky Mountain National Park is within helicopter range and surely a piece of ground that big must have a chopper or two.”“I wouldn’t know about that,” Ullman said. “The hotel does have a two-way radio that Mr. Watson will show you, along with a list of the correct frequencies to broadcast on if you need help. The telephone lines between here and Sidewinder are still aboveground, and they go down almost every winter at some point or other and are apt to stay down for three weeks to a month and a half. There is a snowmobile in the equipment shed also.”“Then the place really isn’t cut off.”Mr. Ullman looked pained. “Suppose your son or your wife tripped on the stairs and fractured his or her skull, Mr. Torrance. Would you think the place was cut off then?”Jack saw the point. A snowmobile running at top speed could get you down to Sidewinder in an hour and a half... maybe. A helicopter from the Parks Rescue Service could get up here in three hours... under optimum conditions. In a blizzard it would never even be able to lift off and you couldn’t hope to run a snowmobile at top speed, even if you dared take a seriously injured person out into temperatures that might be twenty-five below—or forty-five below, if you added in the wind chill factor.“In the case of Grady,” Ullman said, “I reasoned much as Mr. Shockley seems to have done in your case. Solitude can be damaging in itself. Better for the man to have his family with him. If there was trouble, I thought, the odds were very high that it would be something less urgent than a fractured skull or an accident with one of the power tools or some sort of convulsion. A serious case of the flu, pneumonia, a broken arm, even appendicitis. Any of those things would have left enough time.“I suspect that what happened came as a result of too much cheap whiskey, of which Grady had laid in a generous supply, unbeknownst to me, and a curious condition which the old-timers call cabin fever. Do you know the term?” Ullman offered a patronizing little smile, ready to explain as soon as Jack admitted his ignorance, and Jack was happy to respond quickly and crisply.“It’s a slang term for the claustrophobic reaction that can occur when people are shut in together over long periods of time. The feeling of claustrophobia is externalized as dislike for the people you happen to be shut in with. In extreme cases it can result in hallucinations and violence—murder has been done over such minor things as a burned meal or an argument about whose turn it is to do the dishes.”Ullman looked rather nonplussed, which did Jack a world of good. He decided to press a little further, but silently promised Wendy he would stay cool.“I suspect you did make a mistake at that. Did he hurt them?”“He killed them, Mr. Torrance, and then committed suicide. He murdered the little girls with a hatchet, his wife with a shotgun, and himself the same way. His leg was broken. Undoubtedly so drunk he fell downstairs.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • #1
  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER • Before
  • Doctor Sleep,
  • there was
  • The Shining,
  • a classic of modern American horror from the undisputed master, Stephen King.
  • Jack Torrance’s new job at the Overlook Hotel is the perfect chance for a fresh start. As the off-season caretaker at the atmospheric old hotel, he’ll have plenty of time to spend reconnecting with his family and working on his writing. But as the harsh winter weather sets in, the idyllic location feels ever more remote . . . and more sinister. And the only one to notice the strange and terrible forces gathering around the Overlook is Danny Torrance, a uniquely gifted five-year-old.

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Instagram| @Booked.Everynight

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ •HEREEESSSSSS JOHNNNYYY!!!! October means the king of terror, Steven King, is in full force!! Re-reading The Shining, putting it in the Freezer when necessary, & watching the movie is an October must! —————————————————————
•For those of you who aren’t familiar with The Shining.... When Jack Torrance, a college professor with a temper only fueled by a minor drinking problem, is offered a winter job at the Overlook Hotel- Jack, his wife Wendy, & his shining son Danny head for the hills, literally! Overlook hotel is a prestigious hotel with all the best features & outdoor views. The Torrance family is hired on to look after the hotel during the winter so that the regular staff can take some time off. Thinking this is their chance to mend family wounds & for Jack to get back to his writing, the Torrance crew is thrilled for the opportunity- until they aren’t. The last man who brought his family up for the winter shift killed his entire family & then himself. Workers refuse to go into one specific room, & people swear they see & hear things. Before long the Torrance family is seeing & hearing things too. One thing is clear- the Overlook Hotel doesn’t want them to leave & not everyone will!
The Shining is currently available on @Netflix so make sure to add it to your October chills & thrills!
13 people found this helpful
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Literary Brilliance

This is the first book by Stephen King I have read, and if the quality of writing on offer here is anything to go by, it sure as hell won't be the last. This isn't just a high point of the horror genre; "The Shining" could well be one of the best works of fiction seen in our time.

The Shining is a work of brilliance in almost every possible way, in plot, characterisation and atmosphere. The fact that there are only three major characters (well, four towards the end) would make you think that the story would be a little slow to get off the ground. However, Stephen King incorporates so many layers into his writing - Jack and Wendy's ailing marriage, Jack's alcoholism, Danny's "gift"... the list is near endless - that "The Shining"'s grip on you never lets up. The suspense present in the writing is omnipresent, and only grows stronger and stronger as the story goes on. The sense of isolation present in the Overlook gives the Shining its near-tangible atmosphere. As the reader, you are bound to become paranoid, always looking over your metaphorical shoulder for something just out of sight. King's style and lushly descriptive writing can make even remotely unusual events chill you to the bone. And what's more is that you are well rewarded for sticking with the story: "The Shining" has, in it's pages given me the kind of scares that I previously didn't think were possible to get from a book.

And amidst all of this atmosphere, King doesn't compromise on characterisation. On the contrary, Wendy, Jack and Danny are three of the most three-dimensional, inately human characters I've ever had the pleasure to read about. Jack in particular was an interesting one. Seeing his progression from loving father and husband to a malevolent killer, due to the seduction of both his alcoholism and the supernatural forces at work in the Overlook, was a fascinating experience. There is an obvious parallel between Jack and Shakespeare's Macbeth, a famous literary character. Both were basically good people, but both were moulded into something evil by outside forces, ultimately leading to their demise. Wendy and Danny are both interesting to read about too: Wendy playing the role of the protective mother and suspicious wife, Danny the role of a child who'se eyes have seen things someone his age should never have to. All fit their roles like a glove thanks to King's subtle writing and cleverly event based character development.

And even amidst all of this atmosphere and character building, King never becomes lost in needless description the way a lesser author would. He keeps events in the Overlook moving at just the right pace; not so fast that the reader can see what's coming, yet not so slow that we can't see that the situation in the Overlook is growing progressively worse.

OK, I can see that by this point I'm probably just rambling. Even so, I've barely scratched the surface of "The Shining"'s excellence. It's harsh, dark, and sometimes terrifyingly suffocating, and yet still lush and inately human. I honestly can't reccomend it enough, and I'm certain that it will live on as a classic in generations to come. Praise be to Stephen King.
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"The Shine"

After having read Stephen King's 'THE STAND' I could not wait to get my hands on some of his other classic works. Before reading 'THE STAND' I had never been a huge fan of King's, I'd read a few of his books here and there but never any of the ones considered to be classics. So after reading 'THE STAND' I naturally decided to pick up 'THE SHINING' next. Having seen the Stanley Kubrick movie many, many years ago I felt a sense of de ja vu when starting this book which, unfortunately caused me to get off to a very slow start but once I got through the first hundred and fifty or so pages I was hooked.

The story of the haunted Overlook Hotel is enough to scare any reader, especially if you read this book late at night, which I often did! But also the story of the Torrance family who the hotel's ghosts tore apart so handily is also heartbreaking and King deals with all of their thoughts and emotions very well here. While I do admit that there were parts of this book that dragged, overall it was a great reading experience, King can be a master story teller when he is on and he was definitely on when writing 'THE SHINING'. And if you are, like I was, worried that seeing the movie will ruin the book for you, I can assure you that the similarities are few and far between and the ending is completely different! So don't let that tiny detail deter you from reading this classic!
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Great Fifth Novel by Master Stephen King

The Shining is a Stephen King classic from what I think of as the "golden years" of King--the early (and in my opinion best) days of his writing career. Recast twice as a horror movie (once by the legendary Stanley Kubric, and again in the 1990s as TV movie with rather less success), the book is actually a thoughtful if somewhat macabre look at addiction.

In his introspective memoir On Writing, King intimates that The Shining is really a book about alcoholism, not only because the main character, Jack Torrance, is a recovering alcoholic but even more dramatically because of the myriad subtle and not-so-subtle signs of addiction that he begins to display during his family's sojourn at the Overlook Hotel. The brilliance of King's writing is such that the reader is drawn fully into the story even while being taught subtle lessons about the nature and consequences of self-destructive behavior.

Between the book and the movie, much of the plot of The Shining is familiar to many people, even those who aren't familiar with the story itself. References and even caricatures in TV shows such as The Simpsons have driven the story of The Shining deep into today's popular culture. One-liners from the movie like "All work and no play make Jack a dull boy" or "Here's Johnny!" add to the book's not insignificant literary influence.

Jack Torrance, a formerly abusive recovering alcoholic, gets a job as the winter caretaker of the Overlook Hotel, high in the mountains of Colorado. Due to its strategic placement deep in the formidable Rockies, the hotel is inaccessible for much of the winter, when snow clogs the mountain roads beyond a point where navigation is possible. Jack, his wife, Wendy, and their son, Danny, will be stuck alone in the Overlook for a minimum of three months.

This, however, does not perturb them in the least--at first, anyway. Jack plans to use the time to finish work on his play, Wendy is glad for the down-time after a harrowing series of family mishaps, and Danny is excited just to be with his parents in such a beautiful place.

But once the hotel's employees and guests have all gone, strange things begin to happen. They start slowly. A wasp nest inexplicably fails to respond to poison gas. A fire hose in one of the hallways seems to be rearranged slightly. Eerie noises resound just at the edge of consciousness during the long winter nights.

As the winter storms buffet the hotel's huge windows night after night and snow piles up outside in drifts twenty feet high by day, the hotel's strange ministrations intensify. Soon Jack begins to exhibit some of his old drinking behaviors--even though there's no booze in the hotel. Danny sees alarming visions in some of the rooms. And Wendy begins to fear for herself and her son as Jack slowly falls deeper and deeper under the evil spell of the Overlook.

The term shining refers to Danny's uncanny ability to see future events, intuit his parents' thoughts, and communicate telepathically with Dick Hallorann, the Overlook's kindly cook who shares the same abilities. Simply put, the "shining" is really extra-sensory perception (ESP). Interestingly, Danny's shine actually has little to do with the story itself. It comes into play primarily as a means of foreshadowing, and the premise is certainly intriguing. But the real story revolves around Jack and the way he allows the hotel's dark influence to take over his life.

Characteristically for King, The Shining contains quite a bit of offensive language and some explicit sexuality, so it's not for all readers. But quite aside from the entertainment value, which is high, this book provides a depth of insight into the very real horrors of addiction that could only have been plumbed by a combination top-notch author and recovering addict, as King has admitted he is. With the qualifications I would insert into any recommendation of a book by this author, I would commend this book to anyone who has read and enjoyed other books by Stephen King.
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A Really Great Piece Of Writing

Forget for a moment that The Shining is one of the greatest horror novels ever written, the inspiration for a classic movie and a fine TV miniseries, a scary, scary tale of a haunted hotel, and a fun piece of work by the Charles Dickens of our time. What is often forgotten about Stephen King's best book is that nowhere else in fiction is an alcoholic portrayed more realistically, and nowhere else is life for those who love that alcoholic shown with such gutsy, poignant, dead-on, hideous perfection. Those facts and those characters wed with a spectacular story of ghosts and evil, and that is why The Shining will outlive its contemporaries and still be read in a thousand years. The characters here live and breathe within our minds.

Ten-thousand "serious" writers in more literary fields WISH they had the skill Maine's greatest writer does. No matter what genre he is writing in on any given day, King is one of the best writers ever to tell a tale. So read The Shining for whatever reason you wish, it's too great a book not to make your introduction, but keep an eye open for what I said about its characters. The story of a family and alcoholism is what raises this eerie novel to levels of surpassing greatness.
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King is a genius.

I liked this book a lot more the second time for some reason. I enjoy everything Stephen King writes. You really can't go wrong no matter which book you choose. My all time favorites of his are The Stand, The Dead Zone, and all of his short story collections. But I will eventually read everything he's ever written, still working on it!
4 people found this helpful
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The hotel does exist

I love Stephen king's work. This is an old movie but still good to watch. The author was inspired by the true experiences of some guests in the hotel and he himself had something to say. You have to watch the movie and then find out all about it :) and after that watch it again.
The book is a little different than the movie, but the movie was inspired by it. so it is cool to know about the two (movie and book).
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So much more than a horror story about a haunted hotel

I read "The Shining" when it was first released. It was the first time I read a book that I just couldn't put down. I was practically hypnotized by this scary yet clever horror story about a haunted hotel. But, after reading it a second time 30 years later, I find the book is even better than I remembered. The first time I read "The Shining", I focused on the supernatural events and didn't appreciate the slow and steady reveal of the back story and the subtle nuances of the character development. Now I realize "The Shining" is so much more than a horror story about a haunted hotel. It is also a story about dysfunctional family dynamics, love, determination, loyalty, and much, much more. An exciting yet meaningful story with complex characters.
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One of Stephen Kings best...

The Shinning is really a classic and I remember when I read it for the first time. This was the first book that I read of Mr. Kings and it literally scared the pants of of me. I know that there are probably more scary books out now, but at that time not so much. I was working for Chevrolet and building transmissions at the time and every free second I got I would read a few pages, take it home and stay up late, not being able to put down the book. I just could not believe that a book could make me not want to turn off the light. It is still great. I just love this story.
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A movie lovers opinion

Okay, granted, I've always heard the book is better than the movie, but I never truly wanted to believe. I have owned Kubrick's classic since its arrival, and it has always been one of my favorites.

Well, forget the movie, because this book is absolutely unbelievable. From the very beginning, maybe from anticipation, but most likely from the way Mr. King keeps you on the edge of your seat, bed, hell...on your feet...this book is frightening.

Because of the masterful storytelling and descriptive power, I found myself, after the first night, not wanting to pick this book back up, out of sheer terror. When I finally talked myself into it, I could not put it down. Amazing how quiet, yet truly alive, your own home feels, late at night, when there is nothing but your thoughts, awakened by this masterpiece.

Truly unbelievable is the way so very many character's, from Jack, Wendy, Danny and TONY, to Halloran, Lloyd (who could forget good old Lloyd) and the undeniable Grady, are intertwined in a way the movie only begins to uncover.

If you like a good scare, one that wears on you from beginning to end, and truly appreciate the art of imagination, you must give this book a read. Once you do, you will need to watch the movie, again, just to calm yourself down.
2 people found this helpful