Books about Stephen King and his Work:Stephen King: Man and Artist

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Title: [B]Stephen King: Man and Artist[/B]
Author: Carroll F. Terrell
Artist:
Publisher: Northern Lights (Ontario, Maine)
ISBN: 0-9621570-3-1
Year: 1990
 
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Title: [B]Stephen King: Man and Artist[/B]
Author: Carroll F. Terrell
Artist:
Publisher: Northern Lights (Ontario, Maine)
ISBN: 0-9621570-3-1
Year: 1990
-
State: Limited Edition of 200 Author signed and numbered copies
+
State: Limited Edition of 400 Author signed and numbered copies
 

[B]About the Book:[/B]
This book, published by Northern Lights (in Ontario, Maine), was written by a UMO college professor who taught King. Published in 1990 and revised for it's reissue in 1991, it is a rarity among books about King: a look at SK's student years by someone in a position to have seen first-hand his growth as a writer during a formative period in his life.

Carroll F. Terrell's book is a fascinating discussion of King's fiction in classical terms and of the King canon; it is an insightful look at King as a writer and a college student from a unique perspective.

Michael Collings noted, "[I]Stephen King: Man and Artist[/I] provides an invaluable next step in the critical transformation of our assumptions about King, elevating him from mere [I]shockmeister[/I] to acknowledged voice of an age. Terrell is to be congratulated as much for his courage in accepting such a task and for the wealth of knowledge and perception he marshals in fulfilling it"



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[B]About the Book:[/B]
This book, published by Northern Lights (in Ontario, Maine), was written by a UMO college professor who taught King. Published in 1990 and revised for it's reissue in 1991, it is a rarity among books about King: a look at SK's student years by someone in a position to have seen first-hand his growth as a writer during a formative period in his life.

Carroll F. Terrell's book is a fascinating discussion of King's fiction in classical terms and of the King canon; it is an insightful look at King as a writer and a college student from a unique perspective.

Michael Collings noted, "[I]Stephen King: Man and Artist[/I] provides an invaluable next step in the critical transformation of our assumptions about King, elevating him from mere [I]shockmeister[/I] to acknowledged voice of an age. Terrell is to be congratulated as much for his courage in accepting such a task and for the wealth of knowledge and perception he marshals in fulfilling it"



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