
The Book Club Caroline Bicks: My Year of Fear with Stephen King
Apr 21, 2026
Caroline Bicks, Shakespeare scholar turned Stephen King archivist and author, digs into King’s early manuscripts and craft. She explores why his early novels frightened her, his radical revision habits, how grief and memory power his horror, and the recurring role of writers and Maine settings in his work. She also recounts revisiting drafts with King and why his language deserves serious attention.
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How Caroline Got Into King's Archives
- Caroline Bicks was offered access to Stephen King's private archives after teaching him and being appointed the Stephen E. King Chair.
- She asked to study five books that terrified her as a teen: Pet Sematary, The Shining, Salem's Lot, Night Shift, and Carrie.
King as Precise Wordsmith
- Bicks argues Stephen King is a deliberate craftsman who chooses words for sound and effect, not a sloppy genre writer.
- She found margin notes and copy-editor exchanges showing tiny word changes that shape how lines reverberate in readers' ears.
Why She Started With Pet Sematary
- Bicks began her archival reading with Pet Sematary after realizing its setting paralleled her recent move to Maine and King's year teaching on her road.
- That first day revealed sticky-note comments between King and his editor about sound that shaped her approach.

















