This welcome collection of essays by top Stephen King scholars reaches beyond familiar texts and clichéd horrors to demonstrate the ongoing significance of Kings output in the twenty-first century. Readers will discover the importance of understanding Kings work within the complexity of real-world horrors, including school shootings, domestic violence, and serial killers. They will also learn more about Kings wide-ranging influences, his changing reputation in American letters, and the ways his work cannot be reduced to any one genre. It is essential reading, especially for those hoping to understand why Stephen King still matters. -- Carl Sederholm, The Journal of American Culture Simpson and McAleer here cement their reputation as the world leaders in the study of contemporary Stephen King. This superb edited collection offers a series of perceptive and fascinating essays on Kings more recent, less horror-centric output, focusing on more marginal works such as Revival, From a Buick 8, and Bazaar of Bad Dreams, alongside crowd pleasers like Mr. Mercedes and 11/22/63. Together they provide a wide-ranging, often critical, but always significant study of modern King and make a vital contribution to our understanding of this American literary icon. Accessible, engaging, and insightful, this is a book that anyone who reads King in the twenty-first century should have on their shelves. -- Simon Brown, Kingston University London Philip L. Simpson and Patrick McAleers new, edited scholarly collection, The Modern Stephen King Canon: Beyond Horror, is the single finest book about Stephen Kings recent work to have appeared in years. A number of expert King scholars have all contributed brilliant essays to this volume, and its coverage of Kings more recent literary efforts is exceptional. The book is well-conceived, well-organized, eminently readable, and it covers a range of topics and stories that will interest both the novice reader and the King aficionado. The Modern Stephen King Canon: Beyond Horror is a stand-out treasure on any Stephen King bookshelf. -- Gary Hoppenstand, Michigan State University