I read the secret Stephen King book you've never heard of

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I read the secret Stephen King book you've never heard of
Today I wanted to discuss the novella Rage written by Richard Bachman (Stephen King). I've been wanting to read this out of print Stephen King book for some time and was able to find a copy of The Bachman Books that still had Rage in it. It's a controversial story with a complicated past and I'm curious to know what you think of it.
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Пікірлер: 66

  • @dannettermann170
    @dannettermann17010 ай бұрын

    At the time he wrote Rage, it must've seemed like something that could never happen in real life.

  • @Sunshine_Ses

    @Sunshine_Ses

    9 ай бұрын

    That's scary 😳

  • @Dunybrook

    @Dunybrook

    9 ай бұрын

    There was the Texas Tower shooting in 1966 which I think inspired both Rage and Apt Pupil.

  • @Krissybug123
    @Krissybug1239 ай бұрын

    I went to Half-Priced Books today and found an old copy of The Bachman Books with “Rage” in it. I watched this video the other day and couldn’t believe I found a copy for $4.99! Loved your video, but I did want to read it myself as well. 😆

  • @AndaKent

    @AndaKent

    9 ай бұрын

    That's so awesome! I searched at my used bookstore for ages and ended up on ebay haha. I hope you enjoy it!

  • @josephwelch547
    @josephwelch54710 ай бұрын

    I was able to get my copy of thr Bachman collection at the Mississippi Comic Con for 5 dollars. (They definitely didnt know how much it was worth.) Rage and Carrie have similar themes about mental illness,abuse and violence. I think the only reason Rage was pulled was because of the realism of it.

  • @josephcossey1811
    @josephcossey181110 ай бұрын

    Perhaps ironic that the similarly themed "We Need To Talk About Kevin" by Lionel Shriver should have been turned into an award winning movie and that both book and film are now regarded as modern-day classics.

  • @michaellopez9169
    @michaellopez916910 ай бұрын

    Alfred Hitchcock had a similar situation with his movie 'Psycho'. A man who had murdered a few women saw the movie and was inspired to kill another, he was subsequently caught. Hitchcock was asked if he felt any responsibility for the man's actions and he responded, at least in part, by asking what movies the man had seen before murdering the previous women.

  • @santiagogodoy8211
    @santiagogodoy821110 ай бұрын

    You put a lot of work in for such a small channel. I’ve enjoyed your recommendations and reviews!

  • @AndaKent

    @AndaKent

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much! I really appreciate your kind comment.

  • @bramdelorijn8460
    @bramdelorijn846010 ай бұрын

    An audiobook version is available on youtube.

  • @AllenFreemanMediaGuru

    @AllenFreemanMediaGuru

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes, listened to that before eventually getting the collection she has.

  • @kidneystonequeen
    @kidneystonequeen8 ай бұрын

    I love this book but I definitely see why they pulled it. Charlie is painted really sympathetically and you're meant to understand and relate to him in many ways, but not outright excuse his actions. Though its a great story, I think a book from the perspective of a school shooter that paints him so sympathetically, who has so many things go right for him and is very in control as you said, unfortunately takes on a whole different interpretation with the context of the modern day.

  • @interghost
    @interghost10 ай бұрын

    The interesting thing is that Stephen King himself said in another unrelated interview that by banning a book all you do is make so more people seek it out and want to read it. So if he truly felt that way then by banning this book he would have acomplosh the oppsite that they were hoping for??

  • @bramdelorijn8460

    @bramdelorijn8460

    10 ай бұрын

    He didn't exactly ban it, just doesn't do new print runs anymore, the book is available as an audiobook on youtube if you'd like to listen to it.

  • @J.NeiraAuthor

    @J.NeiraAuthor

    10 ай бұрын

    Stopping a book from being printed definitely limits the number of people who would read it. Sure, persistent persons will find it, but most persons aren't persistent.

  • @interghost

    @interghost

    10 ай бұрын

    @@bramdelorijn8460 Ive got the book, Ive got all of his books. Stopping a print is pretty much teh same thing. When they ban a book thats what happens. They dont destroy those that have been printed.

  • @interghost

    @interghost

    10 ай бұрын

    @@J.NeiraAuthor Most King fans will read it at some point. And the high price it goes for shows that there is a demand for it... and thats due to it being cancelled.

  • @J.NeiraAuthor

    @J.NeiraAuthor

    10 ай бұрын

    @@interghost Most casual King fans have probably only read a dozen or so of his stories. Hard-core fans will read them all, but they're only a minority of King fans, like with every fandom. I can compare it to Harry Potter, where tons of Rowling fans have never read the Cursed Child play.

  • @mikedahuman
    @mikedahuman8 ай бұрын

    Correlation does not imply causation, I do not believe a piece of media has the power to make someone do something like this, its a bigger problem than just what children are consuming for entertainment when it gets to the point of murder.

  • @happygoathorror
    @happygoathorror9 ай бұрын

    I also got my copy in the Bachman Books but I was sooo lucky because I got it second-hand for about £10. I was expecting it to arrive without Rage in it!

  • @user-yj8gp7og5p
    @user-yj8gp7og5p9 ай бұрын

    I can only assume the title is directed at your fellow late-Millennials, because most folks my age have very much heard of Rage and are well aware that Richard Bachman is actually Stephen King. This "double life" was part of the the inspiration for The Dark Half, and there is an essay titled, "Why I was Richard Bachman" at the back of The Regulators, which younger folks might not know. Kudos on an informative video.

  • @me3851

    @me3851

    26 күн бұрын

    Yeah. She says all of that in the first 10 seconds of the video.

  • @stephennootens916
    @stephennootens9169 ай бұрын

    I read in eighth grade and recall loving the book. I have two or three copies around the house because I know how hard it is to find.

  • @jimmypratt
    @jimmypratt10 ай бұрын

    i just got into your content and its so good! ty for your hard work :)

  • @suicidal4life
    @suicidal4life9 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the recommendation and i love your shirt

  • @carbonc6065
    @carbonc60657 ай бұрын

    ~Another great video!

  • @thelazarusheart86
    @thelazarusheart869 ай бұрын

    So proud of my hardback Bachman Books. Too bad its a library edition. :(

  • @user-dx1jb4zq9e
    @user-dx1jb4zq9e10 ай бұрын

    Rage is actually a pretty good book that squarely within King's classic era. It's got moments in it where King gets totally carried away by inspiration, like in the bit just before he shoots the teacher where he's describing the cosmic dimension of what he's doing and how his life trajectory led him to that point. It's the kind of stuff King could only write when he was younger and miserable. You don't get that kind of stuff in his books after the 1980s, unfortunately. I hate to say this, but like David Bowie, King started to fall off after he got clean and sober. In the early 80s, during the height of his drug and alcohol problems, his writing has a really strong melancholic streak and you could see that he was still chafing at the idea of being a popular horror writer, which is why you got things like Different Seasons where he was still toying with literary aspirations. That was best King. After rehab though, it seems like he was just paying bills and had acquiesced to his fate. That was around the time he wrote Needful Things. It was all mostly downhill from there, imo.

  • @Dunybrook

    @Dunybrook

    9 ай бұрын

    Couldn't disagree more. Some of his latest books have been among the best he's ever written, and he's never really had a decline in his abilities.

  • @nope5657

    @nope5657

    8 ай бұрын

    No, fuck off with this absurd "this artist was only good when they were an addict" garbage. It's such a backwards, disgusting mindset. And King himself would tell you to fuck off with this nonsense. His addiction is something to look nostalgically back on because you "miss old King." His addiction almost killed him and ruined his family. Substance addiction and pain is not a requisite for good art. King didn't "fall off" after he got sober. He wrote and published some of his best work post-sobriety. Considering your attitude, I'd doubt you'd agree to save face though. He's been writing, literally, pretty much his entire life. He's been a published author for over 50 years. Living life is going to affect your art and outlook. It's really that simple. No artist is going to have the same voice for over 50 years. And let's stop acting like all pre-sobriety King is "all good" when it really wasn't. Novels such as Christine, Cujo, Thinner, and The Gunslinger are very flawed works. I enjoy them all, but they are hardly his most well-rounded novels. And Tommyknockers, the last novel he completed before sobriety, is widely consider one of his worst books.

  • @pennylaughlin3235
    @pennylaughlin323510 ай бұрын

    I’ve heard of & read this book, I loved it.

  • @moatsofdust3210
    @moatsofdust32109 ай бұрын

    I have and read this years ago and never knew until this year it was out of print. Did you read Roadwork in the collection? That one is kinda wild to read now too.

  • @nmbosch85
    @nmbosch8510 ай бұрын

    A few years back i found an old copy of the bachman books on the free book rack at the library. I scooped it up quick!

  • @derrickferguson23317
    @derrickferguson233179 ай бұрын

    Love your content!

  • @AndaKent

    @AndaKent

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @dannettermann170
    @dannettermann17010 ай бұрын

    I still have the paperback Bachman Books that I bought 30 years ago. Glad I held on to it!

  • @grey_wulf
    @grey_wulf10 ай бұрын

    First time viewer here. Really like your thorough analysis of this book. I look forward to your other videos. (But wow, you speak really fast! Slow down a bit 😃😃.)

  • @kirby6844
    @kirby68449 ай бұрын

    I saw the Bachman books and I heard about rage. I won’t read it because of issues I had with school and someone spreading a rumor I would do it. But I like the cover of the original.

  • @American_Mary.
    @American_Mary.10 ай бұрын

    im thinking about getting his book coming out this September with Holly Gibney in the lead

  • @Beatlesfan1993
    @Beatlesfan199310 ай бұрын

    I’ve listened to the audio book. I didn’t listen to it much but I will try it again soon since I can’t read it.

  • @awesomejenisawesome
    @awesomejenisawesome10 ай бұрын

    Anda! Love your channel..btw. But yea...read the book...and other masterpiece by Mr. King...very reflective of teenage angst...and you cant help but to see Charlie as a hero and a voice for teens of the time. However..that fictional life in society is not the reality of today...and I too can honor Mr. Kings wishes to pull the book. Especially as so many children are suffering from recent events. And in my opinion....if we had more regulations on the matter...then we could continue to enjoy books like RAGE...because they would still be deemed "fantasy" and not a reality (which were living in now). BUT ANYWAYS...Thanks for covering this book. Love the channel. ✌️❤

  • @Readingnomad
    @Readingnomad9 ай бұрын

    Not sure if someone has already mentioned, but I was able to get an older edition of The Bachman Books from my library. In case you want to read & can't afford to buy.

  • @vagabundorkchaosmagick-use2898
    @vagabundorkchaosmagick-use28989 ай бұрын

    If the american government and parents are incapable (or unwilling, more likely) to grant a good educations to children, which would make school s h o o t i n g s something that doesn't happen (you know, like in any other country in the world), then the artists should not need to feel responsible to do so.

  • @mikepratt6481
    @mikepratt648110 ай бұрын

    I have that collection! I should try selling it! (Wasn't that crazy about the stories)

  • @jasonrhome710
    @jasonrhome71010 ай бұрын

    I found that edition in a used book store YEARS ago. People will use whatever they want to justify being inhumane to other people, so in that regard I feel like it... opens art to undo responsibilities. However, I think it's up to him to decide how and if his art is presented. (Admitting a bit of hypocrisy there, as I feel that Lucas tinkering with the original Star Wars movies was a BAD move. But movies by their nature cease to belong to a singular author at a certain point of their production. And most of the the story changes and FX additions were BAD or aged poorly.)

  • @quietrobert2010
    @quietrobert201016 күн бұрын

    I sold my copy for $1500... I needed the money

  • @sleepingninjaquiettime
    @sleepingninjaquiettime10 ай бұрын

    In the 9th grade we had to do a book report on it. Turns out its banned in schools.

  • @horrendus
    @horrendus3 ай бұрын

    Ohh I'm not the only one who got Breakfast Club vibes from reading this book

  • @patcoston
    @patcoston2 ай бұрын

    You referred to Rage as a novella but it says novel on the cover. I think of King's book Elevation as a novella, but it also calls itself a novel on the cover. One definition I've seen is that a novella is 7,500 to 40,000 words and Rage has about 54,000 words. I say "about", because word count varies depending on which tool does the counting. It's actually not so obvious to count the words. There are a lot of ambiguous situations where people and tools disagree. Elevation has about 27,000 words so it clearly falls into that definition of a novella, but the book will call itself a novel for marketing purposes.

  • @unknown-uj9le
    @unknown-uj9le10 ай бұрын

    🧐🧐🧐 this could be a premise to a Stephen king novel.

  • @its_Sykoe
    @its_Sykoe10 ай бұрын

    I had such a hard time finding this until I started looking for the german version. It was so much cheaper and easier to find. But I'm wondering if maybe the translation wasn't that good cause even though it's a short read it kinda felt longer than a lot of his other books. I'm not at all saying it's bad. This is just one of those book where I really can't figure out whether I liked it or not. Does anybody else have a book like that?

  • @iknowwhattheyare

    @iknowwhattheyare

    10 ай бұрын

    what is it called in german?

  • @its_Sykoe

    @its_Sykoe

    10 ай бұрын

    @@iknowwhattheyare It's called "Amok".

  • @iknowwhattheyare

    @iknowwhattheyare

    10 ай бұрын

    @@its_Sykoe Vielen lieben Dank :)

  • @sky13destiny
    @sky13destiny10 ай бұрын

    Im a big king fan, mainly due to my mother. Yet I've never heard of rage.

  • @robertcourtney4081
    @robertcourtney408110 ай бұрын

    That shirt is a creepshow shirt, right?

  • @American_Mary.

    @American_Mary.

    10 ай бұрын

    yea from the segmant called fathers day

  • @ToddSmith23
    @ToddSmith2310 ай бұрын

    I’m a creep

  • @derralle5705
    @derralle57059 ай бұрын

    The "secret" book that I "never heard of"? Come on, I used to be a big fan of The King and I read the german translation when it was published in 1988. I thought it was quite good. Later I wrote song lyrics for my band titled Cain Rose Up (yes, I have been edgy. Good times). To answer your question: well, it's his book, so if he feels like it should not be reprinted, then it's a good thing that he is in a position where the publishers cannot do so without his permission. I am strictly against censorship, but as long as people have access to the books they want to read, I'm good. (I like the part where you say "this one is hard to find. I found it on ebay". Also, there seem to be several audio books right here on yt) If you are still reading this, here is a bonus thought for free: Is Running Man also out of print? I am asking because this book ends with a man flying a plane into a skyscraper, and in september of 2001 I wondered what an incredible visionary The King is and how life imitates art in the most obnoxious, disgusting ways.

  • @turbokid8719
    @turbokid871910 ай бұрын

    Rage Steph kings short stories it was okay I like boogeyman & mist better

  • @metalmonk3775
    @metalmonk37759 ай бұрын

    I cant believe how many times i saw this book cover and didnt realize it was a desk he was sitting on and not a wall. Mind you, i never read the book and had no clue as to the plot, but still!

  • @gillian32
    @gillian3210 ай бұрын

    I read "The Bachman Books" in high school. None of the books affected me in a bad way. I think it's interesting that "The Running Man" involves a plane crashing into an office building. I remember "Roadwork" being my favorite. All four books involve guns. I probably thought guns were cool at the time. Now, I just think they're dangerous.

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