Are The Bachman Books: Four Early Novels By Stephen King Scary?

2025-12-11 23:01:39 193

4 Answers

Xander
Xander
2025-12-15 05:54:39
Not 'scary' in the traditional sense, but deeply disturbing. I lent my copy to a friend who returned it saying, 'I need a hug after that.' 'The Long Walk' especially—it’s just kids walking until they drop dead, but the way King digs into their exhaustion and desperation? Brutal. The violence in 'Rage' feels almost prophetic now, which makes it harder to read. These stories don’t rely on haunted houses; they’re about systems crushing people, and that’s way more relatable (and terrifying) than any ghost.
Ben
Ben
2025-12-15 15:17:58
The bachman books' creepiness sneaks up on you—it's not just about jump scares or monsters under the bed. king’s early writing under the Bachman pseudonym has this raw, unsettling edge, like 'Rage' with its school shooting premise (which King later pulled from publication—it hits way too close to home now). 'the long walk' is psychological torture disguised as a dystopian game show, and it lingers in your mind for days. Even 'Roadwork,' which seems like a mundane midlife crisis story, spirals into something darkly compulsive. The scares here aren’t supernatural; they’re human, which makes them stick.

I first read 'The Running Man' expecting action, but the bleakness of the game-show-as-death-sentence premise left me queasy. That’s King’s talent—he makes you care about characters before shredding their hopes. The Bachman stuff feels less polished than his later work, but that roughness adds to the dread. It’s like hearing a true crime podcast where you know the worst is coming, but you can’t stop listening. If you want ghosts, look elsewhere. If you want to feel existential unease, buckle up.
Donovan
Donovan
2025-12-16 12:11:31
The Bachman Books are like a punch to the gut—subtle at first, then the pain spreads. 'The Running Man' is relentless, and 'The Long Walk' is a masterclass in tension. They’re not about fear in the moment, but the kind that settles in afterward, when you’re alone with your thoughts. King’s Bachman phase was his way of exploring darker, weirder ideas, and it shows. These stories stick with you, even if you wish they wouldn’t.
Henry
Henry
2025-12-16 12:38:39
I’d call them more 'uncomfortable' than outright scary. 'Roadwork' wrecked me—it’s about a guy losing everything to bureaucracy, and his slow unraveling is heartbreaking. The Bachman books feel like King was testing boundaries, writing without the pressure of his famous name. The endings aren’t tidy; they’re messy and human, which makes the horror feel earned. If you enjoy bleak, character-driven stories where the real monster is society (or the human mind), these will grab you. Just don’t expect happy resolutions.
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