Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago

Four Past Midnight

Four Past Midnight is a collection of four novellas written by American author and published in September 1990 by . It marks King's second such collection following (1982) and quickly rose to the top of bestseller lists, debuting at number one on fiction chart. The book features interconnected stories themed around time, reality, and the , each titled with a variation of "": King provides an introduction and prefatory notes for each novella, reflecting on the inspirations drawn from his own life and the eerie hour after midnight, which he considers his favorite time for storytelling. The collection has been praised for its gripping narratives and King's mastery of suspense, though some critics noted varying quality among the stories.

Publication history

Writing and conception

Stephen King composed the four novellas comprising Four Past Midnight between 1988 and 1989, establishing the volume as his second major anthology of this form following Different Seasons in 1982. This period aligned with a surge in King's productivity after achieving sobriety in 1987, during which he channeled personal anxieties and everyday horrors into narratives exploring time, identity, fear, and uncanny artifacts. The collection's origins reflect King's method of drawing from intimate fears and observations, transforming them into supernatural tales that probe psychological unease. Each novella stemmed from distinct personal triggers. The Langoliers arose from King's longstanding aversion to , a he has frequently incorporated into his work to evoke the isolation and disorientation of flight. Similarly, Secret Window, Secret Garden was inspired by real-life claims leveled against King by an obsessive fan, who alleged he had appropriated her unpublished ideas for his characters and plots—a baseless accusation that fueled the story's examination of guilt and authorship. The Library Policeman originated from a breakfast conversation with King's young son, Owen, who expressed dread at returning an overdue for fear of reprisal from the "library police," rekindling King's own childhood anxieties about authority figures in public institutions. For The Sun Dog, the concept emerged from King's intrigue with a camera acquired by his wife, , during her photography experiments; he became absorbed by its instant-capture mechanism, which sparked ideas of a device unleashing malevolent, inescapable imagery. Thematically, Four Past Midnight delves into anchored in the hour after , a symbolizing the fragility of where temporal boundaries dissolve and dread infiltrates the psyche. King's prefatory notes to each tale underscore this intent, blending tropes with autobiographical elements to heighten the sense of vulnerability in ordinary settings, from airborne to domestic .

Release details

Four Past Midnight was first published in in 1990 by in the United States. The initial edition spanned 763 pages and carried the 978-0-670-83538-6, priced at $22.95, with yellow endpapers and a featuring artwork by Rob Wood. The first printing consisted of 1.5 million copies, underscoring Stephen King's established position as a major bestseller author at the time. The book was marketed as King's return to the novella format following a series of full-length novels, including The Tommyknockers (1987), and positioned within his tradition of horror anthologies, echoing the structure of his earlier collection Different Seasons (1982). This emphasis highlighted the volume's four interconnected yet standalone stories, appealing to fans seeking King's signature blend of suspense and supernatural elements in a more compact form. Subsequent editions included a UK hardcover release by Hodder & Stoughton in 1990, with 676 pages and ISBN 978-0-340-53526-4. Paperback versions followed, such as the 1991 Signet edition in the US (768 pages, ISBN 978-0-451-17038-5) and the New English Library paperback in the UK (930 pages). Modern reprints continued under Scribner (an imprint of Simon & Schuster), with a 2016 edition (ISBN 978-1-5011-4349-6) extending availability into 2017 and beyond, often in mass-market paperback formats exceeding 900 pages to accommodate updated layouts.

The Langoliers

Plot summary

"The Langoliers" follows a group of ten passengers on Flight No. 29, a from to . They awaken to discover that the crew and most other passengers have vanished mid-flight, leaving behind personal effects but no signs of struggle. Among the survivors are Brian Engle, an off-duty pilot who takes control of the aircraft; Bellman, a blind girl with ; Laurel Stevenson, a schoolteacher; , a ; Don Gaffney, a retired ; Rudy Warwick, a businessman; Albert Kaussner, a teenage aspiring violinist; Simms, a troubled teenager; , a mystery novelist; and Craig Toomey, a paranoid banker haunted by childhood memories. Unable to reach air traffic control, Engle lands the plane at a deserted in . The airport appears lifeless, with no colors, sounds, or smells, and everything feels unnaturally flat and tasteless. Jenkins theorizes that they have passed through an auditory time rip into the recent past, where the world is a decaying "dead zone" awaiting consumption by the Langoliers—voracious, toothy creatures that devour expired time to clear the way for the future. As the Langoliers approach, consuming the landscape from the horizon, tensions rise among the group. Toomey, descending into madness, attacks and must be restrained, leading to violent confrontations. The survivors refuel the plane using instructions from airport manuals and attempt to return to the present by flying toward a second time rip while asleep to avoid detection by the creatures. They narrowly escape as the Langoliers close in, emerging back into the real world shortly after their original departure time, forever changed by the ordeal.

Adaptations

The novella was adapted into a two-part miniseries in 1995, directed by and aired on . Starring as Brian Engle, the production featured practical effects for the Langoliers creatures, though it received mixed reviews for its pacing and . The miniseries runs approximately 180 minutes and closely follows the book's with some character adjustments. An unabridged version, narrated by , was released by Audio as part of the Four Past Midnight series. The recording, approximately 10 hours and 46 minutes in length, captures the story's building suspense through Dafoe's dramatic delivery. It was initially available on cassette in the and later in formats, with a notable CD edition in 2016. No feature films, additional television adaptations, or other major media expansions have been produced as of November 2025.

Secret Window, Secret Garden

Plot summary

Mort Rainey, a successful experiencing a painful , is living alone in his remote cabin at Tashmore Lake, . Struggling with and depression, Mort's solitude is interrupted by the arrival of John Shooter, a stern farmer who accuses him of plagiarizing his unpublished story titled "Secret Window, Secret Garden." The manuscript Shooter presents is nearly identical to Mort's own "Sowing Season," published three years earlier in , except for the title and ending. Shooter demands that Mort produce proof of the story's prior publication within three days, threatening dire consequences if he fails. Initially believing it to be a , Mort dismisses the claim but soon finds his agent's office unable to locate the issue quickly. As the deadline approaches, Shooter escalates his harassment by killing Mort's dog Bump and later setting fire to the vacation home shared with his ex-wife , destroying a stored copy of the magazine that could serve as evidence. Mort hires private detective Frank Spraydeck to investigate Shooter, but Spraydeck is brutally murdered, and Mort's friend and caretaker Tom Greenleaf is also killed, with evidence pointing to Mort as the perpetrator. Pursued by and unraveling psychologically, Mort confronts the truth: Shooter is a hallucinatory stemming from his subconscious guilt over past infidelities and creative insecurities. In a final act of violence, Mort travels to Amy's home intending to kill her and her new partner Milner, but he is shot dead by Ted in . The story concludes with Amy discovering a package from Shooter, revealing the ongoing delusion.

Inspiration

The novella Secret Window, Secret Garden originated from a moment of everyday observation in late 1987, when glanced out the window of his laundry room and noticed a hidden garden obscured by the house's structure. This sight sparked the title phrase, which King viewed as a for the secretive, introspective nature of writing, particularly in fantasy genres where authors construct private worlds. He described it as capturing "what writers—especially writers of fantasy—do with their days and nights," emphasizing the boundary between the writer's inner reality and the external world. King's depiction of the protagonist Mort Rainey's writerly guilt and emerging split personality reflects his own creative anxieties amid personal recovery from severe and addiction, which peaked in the mid-1980s. After his Tabitha's around 1986–1987, King entered and achieved , a period during which he produced Four Past Midnight (1990), including this . He later reflected that writing served as a vital "outflow pipe" to manage the pressures of insecurity and fear that once fueled his dependencies, transforming them into narrative exploration. This biographical context infuses the story's themes of fragmented identity and the psychological toll of authorship. The work also builds on King's prior examination of dual selves in fiction, conceived alongside his 1989 novel , which similarly probes the haunting grip of invented personas on their creators. By blending elements of psychological tension—such as dissolution and the blurring of real and imagined threats— extends King's interest in how writing can unearth subconscious divisions, echoing broader motifs in his oeuvre without direct emulation of specific predecessors.

Adaptations

The novella was adapted into the 2004 film , directed and written by , starring as Mort Rainey, as Amy Rainey, as John Shooter, and as the detective. The film, produced by Gavreaux Productions, Grand Slam Productions, and Pariah Productions, and distributed by , alters some plot elements but retains the core premise. It premiered on March 12, 2004, and grossed $92.3 million worldwide against a $40 million budget. An unabridged audiobook adaptation was released as part of the Four Past Midnight collection by Simon & Schuster Audio. A standalone audio edition, Secret Window, Secret Garden: Two Past Midnight, narrated by James Woods, was issued in 1991 on cassette by Penguin Highbridge Audio, running approximately 3 hours. A BBC Radio 4 dramatization aired in 2001, adapted by Gregory Evans and directed by Patrick Gallagher, featuring actors such as William Hootkins as Mort Rainey. No television miniseries or additional feature films have been produced as of 2025.

The Library Policeman

Plot summary

In the small town of Junction City, , Sam Peebles, a successful , is asked by the local Rotary Club to deliver a speech on the power of . To prepare, he visits the and checks out two books on , where he encounters the stern librarian Ardelia Lortz, who warns him about the severe consequences of overdue returns, including the dreaded Library Policeman. After accidentally destroying the books in a moment of clumsiness, Sam receives an ominous overdue notice demanding immediate return and payment of fines. Returning to the library, he is shocked to learn from the staff that Ardelia Lortz died over 30 years earlier in a violent incident, and they have no record of the books or notice. Disturbed, Sam seeks answers from an eccentric local, Dirty Dave Duncan, a former sign painter and Ardelia's one-time lover, who reveals her horrifying true nature as a shape-shifting entity that preys on children's fears through sessions at the library. As supernatural threats escalate, including terrifying visions of the Library Policeman, Sam confronts repressed memories from his childhood involving a traumatic by a man posing as the enforcer. The entity targets Sam's assistant, Naomi Higgins, forcing him to face his past to protect her. In a climactic struggle, Sam and Naomi battle the creature, ultimately destroying it by severing its physical form and crushing it under an oncoming train, allowing Sam to achieve closure on his buried trauma.

Adaptations

An unabridged adaptation of "The Library Policeman" was released on September 29, 2015, by Audio as part of the Four Past Midnight series, narrated by and running approximately 7 hours and 45 minutes. No , television, or other major adaptations have been produced, largely due to the story's sensitive themes involving .

The Sun Dog

Plot summary

On his fifteenth birthday, teenager Kevin Delevan receives a Sun 660 camera as a gift from his parents, but soon discovers that every it produces depicts a sinister yellow , regardless of what he aims it at. The images of the dog grow progressively more menacing, with the creature appearing closer to the camera and displaying increasingly aggressive features in successive shots. As the supernatural occurrences escalate, the photographed dog begins to manifest in the real world, emerging from the pictures and posing a physical threat. enlists the help of his father, John Delevan, to investigate the anomaly, leading them to uncover the camera's cursed origins linked to Pop Merrill, the unscrupulous owner of a local pawnshop who originally sold the device. In a climactic confrontation, the dog fully escapes the photos and kills Pop Merrill, forcing to improvise a desperate . Using a new Sun camera purchased at a drug store, Kevin photographs the manifested , turning it to stone and trapping it back within the before destroying the original camera to prevent further manifestations. In the resolution, Kevin and his family recover from the ordeal, though the haunting final photo of the serves as a lingering reminder of the terror they endured; a year later, while testing a new computer with a command, Kevin receives a message from the printer stating that the Sun Dog is loose, hungry, and angry.

Adaptations

In April 1999, White Cap Productions and announced a large-format adaptation of "The Sun Dog," with attached to write the screenplay. The project aimed for production to begin in 2000 and distribution in theaters worldwide. However, it was canceled in October 2001 when dropped it from its development slate. A non-commercial Dollar Baby short film adaptation was produced in 1993 by director Matt Flesher. An unabridged audiobook adaptation was released on August 2, 2016, by Audio as part of the Four Past Midnight series, narrated by Tim Sample and running approximately 6 hours and 14 minutes. Sample's performance captures the escalating tension of the story's elements through varied pacing and vocal inflections. No television miniseries or major commercial films beyond these have been produced.

Reception and legacy

Critical reception

Upon its release, Four Past Midnight received mixed contemporary reviews, with critics praising King's suspenseful craftsmanship while critiquing elements of formula and excess. In The New York Times, Andy Solomon lauded King's ability to deliver escapist thrills rooted in childhood fears but faulted the collection for self-indulgent pacing, such as lengthy digressions, and shallow character development that relied on archetypes rather than nuanced individuals, alongside clichéd plot devices and familiar settings. Similarly, Entertainment Weekly's Josh Rubins assigned a C+ grade, noting strong openings that devolved into sagging middles and predictable endings marred by confused hysterics, though he highlighted "The Sun Dog" as a standout exception. Kirkus Reviews commended the book's high entertainment value and immersive horror, describing it as a "double-double Whopper" of scares, but criticized its excessive length and sentimental bloat that diluted tension. Reviews often singled out individual novellas for varying strengths and weaknesses. "The Sun Dog" was frequently cited as the collection's strongest entry for its tight supernatural focus and gleefully visceral centered on a cursed camera manifesting a monstrous entity, effectively blending childhood terror with escalating dread. In contrast, "The Langoliers" drew criticism for repetitive tension-building amid its time-devouring premise, with the creatures rendered more whimsical than terrifying, like "beachballs" in an otherwise original setup. "Secret Window, Secret Garden" earned praise for its psychological depth exploring writerly identity and guilt through a plagiarist stalker, though some found it dour and overly self-referential, echoing earlier works like . "The Library Policeman" was seen as uneven in its horror buildup, starting strong with repressed but unevenly balancing pursuit and , despite being deemed the scariest overall for its vampire-like of . A 2013 reread in The Guardian reflected on the novellas' diverse facets of King's style during a transitional phase, valuing their absurdity and emotional range despite flaws, and noting enduring appeal in capturing late-1980s anxieties. No major critical reviews post-2020 have emerged, though recent fan reviews on platforms like Goodreads and Reddit as of 2025 praise the collection's enduring suspense; the collection maintains popularity in audiobook formats for their immersive narration of King's vivid prose.

Awards and commercial performance

Four Past Midnight won the 1990 for Superior Achievement in a Fiction Collection, recognizing its excellence in . The collection was also nominated for the 1991 for Best Collection and the 1991 for Best Anthology/Collection. Commercially, the book debuted at number one on fiction bestseller list in September 1990 and remained there for six weeks through October 21. It ranked as the second best-selling fiction title of 1990 overall, behind only Jean M. Auel's . This success occurred during Stephen King's peak popularity in the early 1990s, with his works outperforming contemporaries like Dean Koontz's releases, such as Cold Fire, which placed fifteenth on annual bestseller lists. The collection contributed to King's substantial earnings that year, as he reported a two-year income of $22 million, making him the only writer on Forbes' list of highest-paid entertainers for 1990. Overall, King's books have sold over 400 million copies worldwide as of 2025, generating career earnings exceeding $400 million from print sales alone. Four Past Midnight helped popularize the novella format in horror anthologies and influenced the growth of audiobook sales in the 1990s, with its audio edition receiving positive mentions in industry reviews. As of 2025, the book remains in print, including digital editions available through major retailers.

References

  1. [1]
    Four Past Midnight - Stephen King
    Four Past Midnight: The flat surface of a Polaroid photograph becomes for fifteen-year-old Kevin Delevan an invitation to the supernatural. Old Pop Merrill, ...
  2. [2]
    Four Past Midnight - Publication
    Publication: Four Past MidnightPublication Record # 14505 · Author: Stephen King · Date: 1990-09-00 · ISBN: 0-670-83538-2 [978-0-670-83538-6] · Publisher: Viking ...<|control11|><|separator|>
  3. [3]
    The Great Stephen King Reread: Four Past Midnight - Reactor
    Oct 23, 2013 · Four Past Midnight is the Bizarro World version of Different Seasons. Rather than staking out new territory, King tries to recapture his past.
  4. [4]
    BEST SELLERS: September 16, 1990 - The New York Times
    Sep 16, 1990 · Weeks This Last On Week Week List Fiction 1 1 FOUR PAST MIDNIGHT, by Stephen King. (Viking, $22.95.) Four novellas about horror and terror ...
  5. [5]
    Four Past Midnight | Book by Stephen King - Simon & Schuster
    The #1 New York Times bestseller from master storyteller Stephen King—four chilling novellas that will “grab you and not let go” (The Washington Post).
  6. [6]
    FOUR PAST MIDNIGHT - Kirkus Reviews
    Four sizzling horror novellas sandwiched within the theme of Time and the corrosive effects it can have on the human heart.<|control11|><|separator|>
  7. [7]
    Stephen King: on alcoholism and returning to the Shining
    Sep 21, 2013 · King has been sober for decades, ever since his family staged an intervention in the late 1980s. If he hesitated to write in this much depth ...
  8. [8]
    Flight or Fright - By Stephen King and Bev Vincent - Simon & Schuster
    Stephen King hates to fly, and he and co-editor Bev Vincent would like to share their fear of flying with you. ... The Langoliers · 1922 · Cycle of the ...
  9. [9]
  10. [10]
    The Library Policeman - Stephen King
    Inspiration. On the morning when this story started to happen, I was sitting at the breakfast table with my son Owen. Owen tore himself away from the ...
  11. [11]
    The Sun Dog - Stephen King
    Inspiration. Every story has its own secret life, quite separate from its setting, and "The Sun Dog" is a story about cameras and photographs.
  12. [12]
    Four Past Midnight - (stephenkingcollector.com)
    A first edition of 1,500,000 copies. Issued with a dustjacket, yellow endpapers, and price of $22.95. The copyright page will have the numbers 10 9 8 7 6 5 ...
  13. [13]
    Four Past Midnight 1990 - Stephen King Zone
    Four Past Midnight. Published: 1990. Four Past Midnight (1990) is a collection of four novellas, each exploring the terrors that emerge after dark.
  14. [14]
    Four Past Midnight by Stephen King | Hachette UK
    The Bram Stoker Prize-winner for Best Fiction Collection – four riveting, dark stories from Stephen King that will 'grab you and not let go' (Washington ...
  15. [15]
    All Editions of Four Past Midnight - Stephen King - Goodreads
    All Editions of Four Past Midnight ; Published 1991 by New English Library. Paperback, 930 pages ; Published September 1st 1990 by Viking. Hardcover, 763 pages.
  16. [16]
    The Sun Dog | Book by Stephen King - Simon & Schuster
    Kevin Delavan wants only one thing for his fifteenth birthday: a Polaroid Sun 660. There's something wrong with his gift, though. No matter where Kevin Delevan ...Missing: plot | Show results with:plot
  17. [17]
    Sun Dog to be filmed - Lilja's Library - The World of Stephen King
    May 4, 2000 · The Sun Dog: White Cap Productions and Imax Corporation will produce large-format 3D Adaptation of Stephen King's novella, "The Sun Dog". It ...
  18. [18]
    The Sun Dog (Larry Cohen) - Stephen King Short Movies
    Jun 8, 2015 · The Sun Dog: White Cap Productions and Imax Corporation will produce large-format 3D Adaptation of Stephen King's novella, “The Sun Dog”. It ...
  19. [19]
    The World of Stephen King - Lilja's Library
    Sun Dog dropped. IMAX now reports that The Sun Dog has been dropped from IMAX's development slate. September. 28. Stephen King Day October 3, 2001 will be ...
  20. [20]
    The Sun Dog Audiobook on CD by Stephen King, Tim Sample
    #1 New York Times bestselling author Stephen King's novella The Sun Dog, published in his award-winning 1990 story collection Four Past Midnight.
  21. [21]
    THE SUN DOG by Stephen King | Audiobook Review
    14-day returnsTHE SUN DOG Four Past Midnight, Part Four. by Stephen King | Read by Tim Sample. Horror • 6.25 hrs. • Unabridged • © 1990.Missing: Audible | Show results with:Audible<|control11|><|separator|>
  22. [22]
  23. [23]
    Secret Window, Secret Garden - Stephen King
    Secret Window, Secret Garden ... A man accuses author Mort Rainey of stealing one of his story ideas. Rainey, who is going through an ugly divorce, attempts to ...
  24. [24]
  25. [25]
    Scared but Safe - The New York Times
    Sep 2, 1990 · In ''The Sun Dog,'' the terrifying agent is a boy's Polaroid camera. Mr. King's recurring tactic of making the ordinary function in a ...
  26. [26]
    Paperback Picks
    ### Summary of Entertainment Weekly Review of *Four Past Midnight*
  27. [27]
    Rereading Stephen King, chapter 27: Four Past Midnight
    Nov 26, 2013 · There are three other novellas in this collection, but The Langoliers is the one that stuck with me, some of the images burned into my mind as ...
  28. [28]
    sfadb : Stephen King Chronology
    horror/dark fantasy novel — 2nd place. Four Past Midnight • collection • Viking. awards: • Bram Stoker Awards ...
  29. [29]
    Stephen King - Fantastic Fiction
    1991 Locus Award for Best Collection (nominee) : Four Past Midnight. 1991 British Fantasy Award for Best Anthology/Collection (nominee) : Four Past Midnight.Stephen King Omnibus · Stephen King Live · Stephen King's Creepshow · Holly<|separator|>
  30. [30]
    BEST SELLERS: October 14, 1990 - The New York Times
    Oct 14, 1990 · Weeks This Last On Week Week List Fiction 1 1 5 FOUR PAST MIDNIGHT, by Stephen King. (Viking, $22.95.) Four novellas about horror and terror ...
  31. [31]
    Here are the Biggest Fiction Bestsellers of the Last 100 Years
    Nov 27, 2018 · Stephen King, Four Past Midnight 3. Scott Turow, The Burden of Proof 4. Sidney Sheldon, Memories of Midnight 5. Danielle Steel, Message from ...<|control11|><|separator|>
  32. [32]
    Publishers Weekly Annual Adult Bestsellers 1990-2013
    Jun 30, 2017 · Four Past Midnight by Stephen King. Viking (9/10/90) 3. The Burden ... Dean Koontz. Putnam 15. Gai-Jin by James Clavell. Delacorte. NonfictionMissing: sales | Show results with:sales
  33. [33]
  34. [34]
    Stephen King Net Worth (2025) From It, Carrie, The Shining, More
    Oct 19, 2025 · In the past, it has been estimated that King earns between $1 and $3 for each of his book copies that are sold. As he has sold over 400 million ...
  35. [35]