One of my favorite authors, Martha Grimes, gained even more points when one of her characters in Belle Ruin carries around a battered William Faulkner reader in his back pocket. The character is so attached to William Faulkner that he refers to him as “Billy”. If I was stranded on a desert island with only one book I’d choose “Billy’s” Absalom, Absalom! for my companion.

William Faulkner
With such great stories as The Unvanquished and Intruder in the Dust it is a wonder that most High School American Literature classes introduce Faulkner’s work with As I Lay Dying, a difficult stream of consciousness masterpiece. The only story on par with it (in difficulty) is Faulkner’s first novel, The Sound and the Fury. Both are incredible examples of living within the mind of the character, but perhaps the younger reader needs more context from which to read these two novels. Once the reader has Faulkner’s fictional Yoknapatawpha County in mind, and has read stories of the Snopes, Sartoris, and Sutpen, the reader can then understand As I Lay Dying in context.
Around the same time I discovered Stephen King’s Carrie. King was a continuation of my horror education started by Edgar Allen Poe. Alfred Hitchcock did not grab me the way King did. I read every book King published, up through The Gunslinger. And then I moved on. I thought I was grown up, and grown ups didn’t read horror. I graduated to Science Fiction, but the Dark Tower series was not sci fi, even though it had its elements as such.

Stephen King
Last fall I began reading Hearts in Atlantis, then read through the entire Dark Tower series, went back to Insomnia, and started reading everything King published that I could find. I even paid for Under the Dome to be shipped to me instead of waiting to find it in the used bookstore.What I discovered, that I didn’t pay attention to in those younger reading years, is that Stephen King also intertwines his stories. And most of his stories connect to the area around Bangor, Maine. But even more, I found King to be a great story teller.
When I read Faulkner I see, feel life in spirals, going ever so deeper on each iteration of the story, stories within stories that connect to other stories in other books. I read “history” by following each generation to the next, from the Native American land grab through the Civil War through the First World War. King does a similar thing by connecting his worlds across 30+ years of story telling.
I’ve changed my opinion about reading horror, at least about reading Stephen King’s works. He is a great storyteller. I don’t think I would want him to visit my campfire and tell scary stories – I would be too scared. I do, however, want to read more, and reread all that I read before. He doesn’t supplant Faulkner, but I don’t know that any author will. King has taken a spot right next to Martha Grimes, whose works I read as soon as I can, including buying them first hand.
