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The Mist Paperback – June 5, 2018

4.4 out of 5 stars 7,692 ratings

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#1 New York Times bestselling author Stephen King’s terrifying novella about a town engulfed in a dense, mysterious mist as humanity makes its last stand against unholy destruction—originally published in the acclaimed short story collection Skeleton Crew and made into a TV series, as well as a feature film starring Thomas Jane and Marcia Gay Harden.

In the wake of a summer storm, terror descends...David Drayton, his son Billy, and their neighbor Brent Norton join dozens of others and head to the local grocery store to replenish supplies following a freak storm. Once there, they become trapped by a strange mist that has enveloped the town. As the confinement takes its toll on their nerves, a religious zealot, Mrs. Carmody, begins to play on their fears to convince them that this is God’s vengeance for their sins. She insists a sacrifice must be made and two groups—those for and those against—are aligned. Clearly, staying in the store may prove fatal, and the Draytons, along with store employee Ollie Weeks, Amanda Dumfries, Irene Reppler, and Dan Miller, attempt to make their escape. But what’s out there may be worse than what they left behind.

This exhilarating novella explores the horror in both the enemy you know—and the one you can only imagine.
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About the Author

Stephen King is the author of more than sixty books, all of them worldwide bestsellers. His recent work includes Never Flinch (May 2025), the short story collection You Like It Darker (a New York Times Book Review top ten horror book of 2024), Holly (a New York Times Notable Book of 2023), Fairy Tale, Billy Summers, If It Bleeds, The Institute, Elevation, The Outsider, Sleeping Beauties (cowritten with his son Owen King), and the Bill Hodges trilogy: End of Watch, Finders Keepers, and Mr. Mercedes (an Edgar Award winner for Best Novel and a television series streaming on Peacock). His novel 11/22/63 was named a top ten book of 2011 by The New York Times Book Review and won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Mystery/Thriller. His epic works The Dark Tower, It, Pet Sematary, Doctor Sleep, and Firestarter are the basis for major motion pictures, with It now the highest-grossing horror film of all time. He is the recipient of the 2020 Audio Publishers Association Lifetime Achievement Award, the 2018 PEN America Literary Service Award, the 2014 National Medal of Arts, and the 2003 National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters. He lives in Bangor, Maine, with his wife, novelist Tabitha King.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

The Mist I. The Coming of the Storm
This is what happened. On the night that the worst heat wave in northern New England history finally broke—the night of July 19—the entire western Maine region was lashed with the most vicious thunderstorms I have ever seen.

We lived on Long Lake, and we saw the first of the storms beating its way across the water toward us just before dark. For an hour before, the air had been utterly still. The American flag that my father put up on our boathouse in 1936 lay limp against its pole. Not even its hem fluttered. The heat was like a solid thing, and it seemed as deep as sullen quarry-water. That afternoon the three of us had gone swimming, but the water was no relief unless you went out deep. Neither Steffy nor I wanted to go deep because Billy couldn’t. Billy is five.

We ate a cold supper at five-thirty, picking listlessly at ham sandwiches and potato salad out on the deck that faces the lake. Nobody seemed to want anything but Pepsi, which was in a steel bucket of ice cubes.

After supper Billy went out back to play on his monkey bars for a while. Steff and I sat without talking much, smoking and looking across the sullen flat mirror of the lake to Harrison on the far side. A few powerboats droned back and forth. The evergreens over there looked dusty and beaten. In the west, great purple thunderheads were slowly building up, massing like an army. Lightning flashed inside them. Next door, Brent Norton’s radio, tuned to that classical-music station that broadcasts from the top of Mount Washington, sent out a loud bray of static each time the lightning flashed. Norton was a lawyer from New Jersey and his place on Long Lake was only a summer cottage with no furnace or insulation. Two years before, we had a boundary dispute that finally wound up in county court. I won. Norton claimed I won because he was an out-of-towner. There was no love lost between us.

Steff sighed and fanned the top of her breasts with the edge of her halter. I doubted if it cooled her off much but it improved the view a lot.

“I don’t want to scare you,” I said, “but there’s a bad storm on the way, I think.”

She looked at me doubtfully. “There were thunderheads last night and the night before, David. They just broke up.”

“They won’t do that tonight.”

“No?”

“If it gets bad enough, we’re going to go downstairs.”

“How bad do you think it can get?”

My dad was the first to build a year-round home on this side of the lake. When he was hardly more than a kid he and his brothers put up a summer place where the house now stood, and in 1938 a summer storm knocked it flat, stone walls and all. Only the boathouse escaped. A year later he started the big house. It’s the trees that do the damage in a bad blow. They get old, and the wind knocks them over. It’s mother nature’s way of cleaning house periodically.

“I don’t really know,” I said, truthfully enough. I had only heard stories about the great storm of thirty-eight. “But the wind can come off the lake like an express train.”

Billy came back a while later, complaining that the monkey bars were no fun because he was “all sweated up.” I ruffled his hair and gave him another Pepsi. More work for the dentist.

The thunderheads were getting closer, pushing away the blue. There was no doubt now that a storm was coming. Norton had turned off his radio. Billy sat between his mother and me, watching the sky, fascinated. Thunder boomed, rolling slowly across the lake and then echoing back again. The clouds twisted and rolled, now black, now purple, now veined, now black again. They gradually overspread the lake, and I could see a delicate caul of rain extending down from them. It was still a distance away. As we watched, it was probably raining on Bolster’s Mills, or maybe even Norway.

The air began to move, jerkily at first, lifting the flag and then dropping it again. It began to freshen and grew steady, first cooling the perspiration on our bodies and then seeming to freeze it.

That was when I saw the silver veil rolling across the lake. It blotted out Harrison in seconds and then came straight at us. The powerboats had vacated the scene.

Billy stood up from his chair, which was a miniature replica of our director’s chairs, complete with his name printed on the back. “Daddy! Look!”

“Let’s go in,” I said. I stood up and put my arm around his shoulders.

“But do you see it? Dad, what is it?”

“A water-cyclone. Let’s go in.”

Steff threw a quick, startled glance at my face and then said, “Come on, Billy. Do what your father says.”

We went in through the sliding glass doors that give on the living room. I slid the door shut on its track and paused for another look out. The silver veil was three-quarters of the way across the lake. It had resolved itself into a crazily spinning teacup between the lowering black sky and the surface of the water, which had gone the color of lead streaked with white chrome. The lake had begun to look eerily like the ocean, with high waves rolling in and sending spume up from the docks and breakwaters. Out in the middle, big whitecaps were tossing their heads back and forth.

Watching the water-cyclone was hypnotic. It was nearly on top of us when lightning flashed so brightly that it printed everything on my eyes in negative for thirty seconds afterward. The telephone gave out a startled ting! and I turned to see my wife and son standing directly in front of the big picture window that gives us a panoramic view of the lake to the northwest.

One of those terrible visions came to me—I think they are reserved exclusively for husbands and fathers—of the picture window blowing in with a low hard coughing sound and sending jagged arrows of glass into my wife’s bare stomach, into my boy’s face and neck. The horrors of the Inquisition are nothing compared to the fates your mind can imagine for your loved ones.

I grabbed them both hard and jerked them away. “What the hell are you doing? Get away from there!”

Steff gave me a startled glance. Billy only looked at me as if he had been partially awakened from a deep dream. I led them into the kitchen and hit the light switch. The phone ting-a-linged again.

Then the wind came. It was as if the house had taken off like a 747. It was a high, breathless whistling, sometimes deepening to a bass roar before glissading up to a whooping scream.

“Go downstairs,” I told Steff, and now I had to shout to make myself heard. Directly over the house thunder whacked mammoth planks together and Billy shrank against my leg.

“You come too!” Steff yelled back.

I nodded and made shooing gestures. I had to pry Billy off my leg. “Go with your mother. I want to get some candles in case the lights go off.”

He went with her, and I started opening cabinets. Candles are funny things, you know. You lay them by every spring, knowing that a summer storm may knock out the power. And when the time comes, they hide.

I was pawing through the fourth cabinet, past the half-ounce of grass that Steff and I bought four years ago and had still not smoked much of, past Billy’s wind-up set of chattering teeth from the Auburn Novelty Shop, past the drifts of photos Steffy kept forgetting to glue in our album. I looked under a Sears catalogue and behind a Kewpie doll from Taiwan that I had won at the Fryeburg Fair knocking over wooden milk bottles with tennis balls.

I found the candles behind the Kewpie doll with its glazed dead man’s eyes. They were still wrapped in their cellophane. As my hand closed around them the lights went out and the only electricity was the stuff in the sky. The dining room was lit in a series of shutterflashes that were white and purple. Downstairs I heard Billy start to cry and the low murmur of Steff soothing him.

I had to have one more look at the storm.

The water-cyclone had either passed us or broken up when it reached the shoreline, but I still couldn’t see twenty yards out onto the lake. The water was in complete turmoil. I saw someone’s dock—the Jassers’, maybe—hurry by with its main supports alternately turned up to the sky and buried in the churning water.

I went downstairs. Billy ran to me and clung to my legs. I lifted him up and gave him a hug. Then I lit the candles. We sat in the guest room down the hall from my little studio and looked at each other’s faces in the flickering yellow glow and listened to the storm roar and bash at our house. About twenty minutes later we heard a ripping, rending crash as one of the big pines went down nearby. Then there was a lull.

“Is it over?” Steff asked.

“Maybe,” I said. “Maybe only for a while.”

We went upstairs, each of us carrying a candle, like monks going to vespers. Billy carried his proudly and carefully. Carrying a candle, carrying the fire, was a very big deal for him. It helped him forget about being afraid.

It was too dark to see what damage had been done around the house. It was past Billy’s bedtime, but neither of us suggested putting him in. We sat in the living room, listened to the wind, and looked at the lightning.

About an hour later it began to crank up again. For three weeks the temperature had been over ninety, and on six of those twenty-one days the National Weather Service station at the Portland Jetport had reported temperatures of over one hundred degrees. Queer weather. Coupled with the grueling winter we had come through and the late spring, some people had dragged out that old chestnut about the long-range results of the fifties A-bomb tests again. That, and of course, the end of the world. The oldest chestnut of them all.

The second squall wasn’t so hard, but we heard the crash of several trees weakened by the first onslaught. As the wind began to die down again, one thudded heavily on the roof, like a fist dropped on a coffin lid. Billy jumped and looked apprehensively upward.

“It’ll hold, champ,” I said.

Billy smiled nervously.

Around ten o’clock the last squall came. It was bad. The wind howled almost as loudly as it had the first time, and lightning seemed to be flashing all around us. More trees fell, and there was a splintering crash down by the water that made Steff utter a low cry. Billy had gone to sleep on her lap.

“David, what was that?”

“I think it was the boathouse.”

“Oh. Oh, Jesus.”

“Steffy, I want us to go downstairs again.” I took Billy in my arms and stood up with him. Steff’s eyes were big and frightened.

“David, are we going to be all right?”

“Yes.”

“Really?”

“Yes.”

We went downstairs. Ten minutes later, as the final squall peaked, there was a splintering crash from upstairs—the picture window. So maybe my vision earlier hadn’t been so crazy after all. Steff, who had been dozing, woke up with a little shriek, and Billy stirred uneasily in the guest bed.

“The rain will come in,” she said. “It’ll ruin the furniture.”

“If it does, it does. It’s insured.”

“That doesn’t make it any better,” she said in an upset, scolding voice. “Your mother’s dresser . . . our new sofa . . . the color TV . . .”

“Shhh,” I said. “Go to sleep.”

“I can’t,” she said, and five minutes later she had.

I stayed awake for another half hour with one lit candle for company, listening to the thunder walk and talk outside. I had a feeling that there were going to be a lot of people from the lakefront communities calling their insurance agents in the morning, a lot of chainsaws burring as cottage owners cut up the trees that had fallen on their roofs and battered through their windows, and a lot of orange CMP trucks on the road.

The storm was fading now, with no sign of a new squall coming in. I went back upstairs, leaving Steff and Billy on the bed, and looked into the living room. The sliding glass door had held. But where the picture window had been there was now a jagged hole stuffed with birch leaves. It was the top of the old tree that had stood by our outside basement access for as long as I could remember. Looking at its top, now visiting in our living room, I could understand what Steff had meant by saying insurance didn’t make it any better. I had loved that tree. It had been a hard campaigner of many winters, the one tree on the lakeside of the house that was exempt from my own chainsaw. Big chunks of glass on the rug reflected my candle-flame over and over. I reminded myself to warn Steff and Billy. They would want to wear their slippers in here. Both of them liked to slop around barefoot in the morning.

I went downstairs again. All three of us slept together in the guest bed, Billy between Steff and me. I had a dream that I saw God walking across Harrison on the far side of the lake, a God so gigantic that above the waist He was lost in a clear blue sky. In the dream I could hear the rending crack and splinter of breaking trees as God stamped the woods into the shape of His footsteps. He was circling the lake, coming toward the Bridgton side, toward us, and all the houses and cottages and summer places were bursting into purple-white flame like lightning, and soon the smoke covered everything. The smoke covered everything like a mist.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Scribner (June 5, 2018)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 176 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1982103523
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1982103521
  • Grade level ‏ : ‎ 7 - 9
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 5.7 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.5 x 0.5 x 8.38 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 out of 5 stars 7,692 ratings

About the author

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Stephen King
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Stephen King is the author of more than sixty books, all of them worldwide bestsellers. His recent work includes NEVER FLINCH, YOU LIKE IT DARKER (a New York Times Book Review top ten horror book of 2024), HOLLY (a New York Times Notable Book of 2023), FAIRY TALE, BILLY SUMMERS, IF IT BLEEDS, THE INSTITUTE, ELEVATION, THE OUTSIDER, SLEEPING BEAUTIES (cowritten with his son Owen King), and the Bill Hodges trilogy: END OF WATCH, FINDERS KEEPERS, and MR. MERCEDES (an Edgar Award winner for Best Novel). His novel 11/22/63 was named a top ten book of 2011 by the New York Times Book Review and won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Mystery/Thriller. His epic works THE DARK TOWER, IT, PET SEMATARY, DOCTOR SLEEP, and FIRESTARTER are the basis for major motion pictures, with IT now the highest-grossing horror film of all time. He is the recipient of the 2018 PEN America Literary Service Award, the 2014 National Medal of Arts, and the 2003 National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters. He lives in Bangor, Maine, with his wife, novelist Tabitha King.

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
7,692 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers enjoy this book from cover to cover, praising its fast pace and immersive sound effects. The story delivers an extraordinary tale that makes readers feel the narrative deeply, with wonderful characters and good acting performances. Customers find the mist element engaging, though opinions on the scariness level are mixed, with some finding it terrifying while others say it wasn't scary enough.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

248 customers mention "Readability"237 positive11 negative

Customers find the book highly readable, enjoying it from start to finish and describing it as an entertaining read.

"...The book is also a fairly quick read. I rarely would give a book five stars but I believe this one deserves it." Read more

"...since my last King book, and reading 'The Mist' reminded me how potent good writing can be. I LOVE 'The Mist'...." Read more

"...It is a snack of a story and well worth the re-read!" Read more

"...It is a modern retelling of the theme from Les Miserable and so satisfying. I am looking forward to the rest of you Like It Darker." Read more

179 customers mention "Story quality"132 positive47 negative

Customers praise the story's quality, describing it as extraordinary and suspenseful, with one customer noting how it makes readers feel immersed in the narrative.

"...The book has one of the best endings I have read, it doesn’t necessarily end the story but it is not sloppy or lazy either...." Read more

"There was a lot going for this story. Plenty of monsters, both man-eating and human. A father working diligently to keep his son safe...." Read more

"...In fact, King reveals the monsters INSIDE the store, and the psychology of fear and anger and the deadly combination of the two...." Read more

"...It is a snack of a story and well worth the re-read!" Read more

28 customers mention "Character development"23 positive5 negative

Customers appreciate the character development in the book, with wonderful characters and good acting, and one customer notes that the voices are provided by different voice actors.

"...I found the characters to be interested and well developed, as well as the story to be unsettlingly relatable, especially in our current political..." Read more

"Likes: great character building (seemingly as always with his books), descriptive environments, and different from the movie which I unfortunately..." Read more

"...The story is paced well, you really come to care about the protagonist. To borrow from the story, it's an Alfred Hitchcock ending...." Read more

"...All the voices are by different voice actors and sound great, I love productions like this...." Read more

13 customers mention "Interest"13 positive0 negative

Customers find the book engaging, with one mentioning it serves as a great introduction to the world and another noting it's a good way to start the King multiverse.

"...Regardless it still is an interesting idea, if not fully original, of a town that suddenly has a mist roll in...." Read more

"..." a Hemingway ending"....but it is a good read and really holds your interest." Read more

"...themes of terror of the unknown, societal prejudices and the true quest for life within a very tight framework...." Read more

"THE MIST WAS A GREAT MIVIE. IT HAD GREAT SPECIAL AFFECTS...." Read more

13 customers mention "Mist quality"13 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the mist element in the book, with one mentioning its scariness, and another noting it was a great movie.

"Enjoyed The Mist. My copy included a preview story from the upcoming You Like it Darker which was excellent...." Read more

"...The Mist was great as a movie (as are many others). I decided one day to try out The Mist the story. Almost identical to the movie...." Read more

"...The description of the creatures, the scariness of the mist, and the fact that the story's not about the mist at all, but the peoples dealing with..." Read more

"...The Mist is great except for one flaw, i wish it was longer...." Read more

13 customers mention "Pacing"13 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the pacing of the book, describing it as a fast read with a nice flow, and one customer notes that it gets better with each reading.

"...This is a quick, gripping novella that shows Kings teeth are as sharp regardless of his story's length...." Read more

"...Wastes no time in creating the scare factor and maintaining it. Wraps up quickly, but not quite as a brutal ending as in the movie." Read more

"As always, Stephen King did it again!! Always fast paced action and horror beyond the normal imagination ! Stephen King is the Master of Horror...." Read more

"...Peak performance. Thats why I have read about 50 more of Kings novels" Read more

28 customers mention "Sound quality"17 positive11 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the sound quality of the book, with some praising the immersive surround sound and special effects that are riveting, while others find the voices too hard to hear and complain about the overpowering use of sound effects.

"I used the audio version and it was great. Easy to listen to at the gym or when walking from class to class...." Read more

"...What 3D audio means in this story is some voices are quiet, some are loud, and some only come from one speaker while another comes from another..." Read more

"Love this. Immersive surround sound is brilliantly done. Sit in a dark room at night and get the heck scared out of you." Read more

"...Stephan King tale is fully dramatized by various actors and features 3-D sound effects...." Read more

21 customers mention "Scariness level"9 positive12 negative

Customers have mixed reactions to the scariness level of the book, with some finding it terrifying and "Creepy As Hell," while others report it wasn't interesting or scary.

"...There are dramatic, violent scenes but considering how notorious Stephen King is this would be a good start. The book is also a fairly quick read...." Read more

"...This is a quick, gripping novella that shows Kings teeth are as sharp regardless of his story's length...." Read more

"...It was suspenseful but at the same time terrifying!!! Enjoy, constant reader!!!" Read more

"...A good writer can write about almost anything and keep you in the game...." Read more

Great book, but printed upside down!
5 out of 5 stars
Great book, but printed upside down!
Great book. Seems there was a printing error and the cover got put on upside down. Did not make a difference other than looking like a wierdo in public reading my book upside down
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 2024
    This is my first time reading Stephen King and it surely won’t be my last. His writing is immaculate and the story is extremely thoughtful. The book has one of the best endings I have read, it doesn’t necessarily end the story but it is not sloppy or lazy either. This book is a fairly soft introduction to horror, if you haven’t read much horror before I would recommend it. There are dramatic, violent scenes but considering how notorious Stephen King is this would be a good start. The book is also a fairly quick read. I rarely would give a book five stars but I believe this one deserves it.
    3 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 10, 2024
    There was a lot going for this story. Plenty of monsters, both man-eating and human. A father working diligently to keep his son safe. Claustrophobic setting. What keeps this story from five stars is actually the ending. King even writes that the narrator’s father would say it is a bad ending. Is that supposed to be like an acknowledgment that not everyone will find the conclusion satisfying? Possibly. That doesn’t make the ending any better, though. I think the fact that this is a novella rather than one of King’s novels makes it a little more forgivable, but it almost feels like he ran out of imagination for what might happen next.
    Having watched the film ahead of time, I must say that it has a better ending, though not one I would have wanted to read either.
    10 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 29, 2018
    I got back into reading thanks to Stephen King, having stopped reading after graduating high school.
    After working through some of his works, 'The Shining' being the novel that truly wet my mouth for more, I ventured off to taste the work of other authors. I was safe with the King but that couldn't be what reading was about for me, or eventually I'd find myself without anything else to read, thus giving up reading for a second and possibly final time.
    So it has been a few months since my last King book, and reading 'The Mist' reminded me how potent good writing can be.
    I LOVE 'The Mist'. I saw the movie first, years ago, and was dumbstruck. This novel only solidifies my gawking at his horror.
    This book doesn't just present you with evil monsters outside in the mist. In fact, King reveals the monsters INSIDE the store, and the psychology of fear and anger and the deadly combination of the two.
    Mob mentality is truly something to witness, and King brings us as close as he can while tempers rose and fear swallows them up resulting in death and more death.
    Being as I just finished, I could ramble on forever honestly.
    This is a quick, gripping novella that shows Kings teeth are as sharp regardless of his story's length.
    If you haven't read any King before (how can that be?!) then this is a great story to start with. If you have experience with King but haven't experienced 'The Mist', do something nice for yourself and dive in!
    30 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2024
    I had this one in the long ago and loaned it to someone who has faded from memory. I devoured it while waiting to be seen at a doctors office.
    It is a snack of a story and well worth the re-read!
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2024
    At the end, I felt cheated in two ways.

    The first is that, in the words of King's own first-person narrator: "But you mustn’t expect some neat conclusion. There is no 'And they escaped from the mist into the good sunshine of a new day; or 'When we awoke the National Guard had finally arrived;' or even that great old standby: 'It was all a dream.' It is, I suppose, what my father always frowningly called “an Alfred Hitchcock ending,” by which he meant a conclusion in ambiguity that allowed the reader or viewer to make up his own mind about how things ended. My father had nothing but contempt for such stories, saying they were 'cheap shots.'"

    Well, yeah, his father was right. This is unprofessional storytelling. He started to write a story and couldn't figure out how to end it, but because he's Stephen King, and because lots of people would rather read a lousy Stephen King book than no Stephen King book, he gets away with it.

    You can enjoy the flow of storytelling and his evocation of horrible events--like the sounds approaching monsters make in the dark. It keeps you reading to find out what happens next. But nothing makes sense and everything is left hanging.

    The second reason is that when "The Mist" ends, you're less than halfway through the Kindle book. You have paid full price for half a book. The rest of the book is a partial sample of a book entitled "You Like It Darker." Sample chapters are annoying. But when the sample preview is half the book, that's not annoying, that's dishonest.

    So, 1) the preview is unsatisfying, because is an unfinished book, but we all know that going in. 2) "The Mist" is unsatisfying, because it may be all he wrote, but it's an unfinished story. And he says so himself. But we don't know it in advance, he springs it on us at the end.
    5 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 29, 2025
    I've probably read this novella at least15-20 times... I always come back to it when I need a good,thrilling read...
  • Reviewed in the United States on April 29, 2024
    Mist is ok but too long. this is not vintage King, or master of the genre King. It is ho hum 3* King.
    But... But...
    As is fairly common there is a preview of a new book at the end of Mist. Danny Coughlin's Bad Dream is a complete story from his book to be released May 22, 2024. This story is King at his best, telling a story of a psychic dream that Danny has that forces him to try and do the right thing as a result. It is a modern retelling of the theme from Les Miserable and so satisfying. I am looking forward to the rest of you Like It Darker.
  • Reviewed in the United States on October 28, 2024
    Great book!! Can’t wait to read more of his books.
    One person found this helpful
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  • JSR
    5.0 out of 5 stars Buen libro
    Reviewed in Spain on March 14, 2025
    Very nice read
  • chipstar2011
    5.0 out of 5 stars 完成度の高い中編小説
    Reviewed in Japan on August 16, 2024
    キングの有名な小説。ただのミスト(霧)が化け物のように変化していき、その不透明な視界の中に人間同士の葛藤や怨憎、暴力の予感が蠢く。ホラー要素もあり…英語(超)上級者向けだと感じました。
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  • Mullet
    5.0 out of 5 stars Short, sweet, nice day time read.
    Reviewed in Australia on December 12, 2024
    Slimmer than the other King books I currently have, I was surprised with how much the director of the movie adaptation had done with the source material.

    It's a "fun" book, if fun can be a word for King's titles. It was a quick read and well worth the time I spent with it.
  • Amazon Kunde
    5.0 out of 5 stars Immer wieder gut
    Reviewed in Germany on December 10, 2024
    Ein Klassiker. Schon ewig nicht mehr gelesen aber ich wurde sofort wieder gepackt.
  • Bob
    5.0 out of 5 stars Great book.
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 4, 2024
    Great story line.