Regular price €25.99
A01=Charles Ardai
A01=Michael J. Blouin
A01=Stephen King
A01=Tony Magistrale
Author_Charles Ardai
Author_Michael J. Blouin
Author_Stephen King
Author_Tony Magistrale
Category=DSK
Category=FF
Category=JBCC1
Dolores Claiborne
Ed McBain
Edgar Allan Poe
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_crime
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
femme fatale
film noir
gender
hardboiled
Holly
Misery
Mr. Mercedes
popular culture
Raymond Chandler
Richard Bachman
The Dead Zone

Product details

  • ISBN 9781496852755
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Apr 2025
  • Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Over the past thirty years, Stephen King has received enormous attention from both the popular press as well as academics seeking to explain the unique phenomenon of his success. Books on King explore his canon in religious contexts, in political and historical contexts, in mythic—specifically Jungian—contexts, in Gothic/horror (especially American literary) contexts, and in a wide variety of other contexts appropriate to a writer who, over the past half century, has become "America’s Storyteller." Beginning with a never-published chapter authored by Stephen King himself on the influence of the genre on his own writing, King Noir makes an invaluable contribution to King scholarship by placing King’s works in conversation with American crime fiction.

This is the third book that Tony Magistrale and Michael J. Blouin have coauthored on the work of Stephen King, and the first to consider King’s canon through the lens of crime fiction. King Noir examines not only King’s own efforts at writing in the detective genre, but also how the detective genre finds its way into work typically regarded as horror fiction.

In interviews, King has acknowledged his debt to earlier writers in the genre, such as Ed McBain and Raymond Chandler, and he much more often references hardboiled writers than he does horror writers. One could speculate that King became a writer because of his love of pulpy crime fiction, which he continues to hold in high esteem. From The Dead Zone to Mr. Mercedes, from the crime fiction of his pseudonym Richard Bachman to his most recent novel Holly, King returns obsessively to patterns established by American sleuths of every stripe, paying homage to them at the same time as he innovates on the formulas he has inherited. To focus upon a hardboiled Stephen King is to discover exciting new avenues for inquiry into one of America’s most enduring, and adaptable, storytellers.

Tony Magistrale is author of numerous books and articles, most of which have centered on defining and tracing Anglo-American Gothicism from its origins in nineteenth-century romanticism to its contemporary manifestations in popular culture, particularly in the work of Edgar Allan Poe and Stephen King. He has published three separate interviews with King, and Magistrale and Blouin both served as research assistants to Mr. King.

Michael J. Blouin has published extensively on the American Gothic, especially on Stephen King’s fiction. In addition to his monograph Stephen King and American Politics, Blouin coauthored Stephen King and American History (with Magistrale); one of the chapters of that book unanimously won the Carl Bode prize for the best essay published in the Journal of American Culture 2020. He is also author of Democracy and the American Gothic.