People, Places and Things (short story collection)


People, Places and Things is a short story collection by Chris Chesley and Stephen King, self-published in 1960.

Publication

People, Places and Things was written by Chris Chesley and Stephen King in the summer before beginning high school. It was self-published in 1960 under the name of "Triad Publishing" using King's brother's small printing press and handbound. King estimates that only 10 copies were printed. Copies were sold to school friends for about $0.10 to $0.25 each. A second print run was issued in 1963. The only known extant copy of People, Places and Things is held by King; it has been described as "a one-of-a-kind King collectible" and as "the rarest piece of Stephen King material in existence".
In the early-1960s, King rewrote "I've Got to Get Away!" and retitled it "The Killer". He submitted "The Killer" to Forrest J Ackerman for the magazine Spacemen; it was the first story he submitted for publication. While not accepted at the time, the story was later published in issue #202 of Famous Monsters of Filmland in spring 1994 with an introduction by Ackerman.
"The Hotel at the End of the Road" was republished in 1993 in the fourth edition of Market Guide for Young Writers by Kathy Henderson and again in 1996 in the fifth edition.

Reception

Rocky Wood describes People, Places and Things as "juvenilia" but with "clear hints of the King to come". Michael R. Collings states, "In approach, content, theme, and treatment clearly suggest directions the mature King would explore in greater detail". Tyson Blue notes that People, Places and Things "cannot be held up to the same critical standards as later published short stories and novels" but nonetheless notes some merit in the work, stating that "a reading of these stories shows that even at an early age, King's interests and inspirations were already at work he was already assimilating the work of other writers", and describing "Never Look Behind You" as "an intriguing little tale".