Buy new:
$23.85$23.85
Arrives:
April 22 - May 2
Ships from: Amazon Sold by: Brian's'tore
Buy used: $11.23
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Revival: A Novel Hardcover – Day to Day Calendar, November 11, 2014
Purchase options and add-ons
In a small New England town, over half a century ago, a shadow falls over a small boy playing with his toy soldiers. Jamie Morton looks up to see a striking man, the new minister. Charles Jacobs, along with his beautiful wife, will transform the local church. The men and boys are all a bit in love with Mrs. Jacobs; the women and girls feel the same about Reverend Jacobs—including Jamie’s mother and beloved sister, Claire. With Jamie, the Reverend shares a deeper bond based on a secret obsession. When tragedy strikes the Jacobs family, this charismatic preacher curses God, mocks all religious belief, and is banished from the shocked town.
Jamie has demons of his own. Wed to his guitar from the age of thirteen, he plays in bands across the country, living the nomadic lifestyle of bar-band rock and roll while fleeing from his family’s horrific loss. In his mid-thirties—addicted to heroin, stranded, desperate—Jamie meets Charles Jacobs again, with profound consequences for both men. Their bond becomes a pact beyond even the Devil’s devising, and Jamie discovers that revival has many meanings.
This rich and disturbing novel spans five decades on its way to the most terrifying conclusion Stephen King has ever written. It’s a masterpiece from King, in the great American tradition of Frank Norris, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Edgar Allan Poe.
- Print length405 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherScribner
- Publication dateNovember 11, 2014
- Dimensions6.5 x 1.5 x 10 inches
- ISBN-101476770387
- ISBN-13978-1476770383
Frequently bought together

Similar items that may deliver to you quickly
The three true ages of man are youth, middle age, and how the fuck did I get old so soon?Highlighted by 1,315 Kindle readers
But writing is a wonderful and terrible thing. It opens deep wells of memory that were previously capped.Highlighted by 959 Kindle readers
When you want to feel better, call something a piece of shit. It usually works.Highlighted by 931 Kindle readers
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
An Amazon Best Book of the Month, November 2014: How does Stephen King do it? In book after book, writing long (Under the Dome, 11/22/63) or short (Joyland) he manages, nearly always, to tell a compelling story that is both entertaining and somehow profound, or at least thoughtful. His latest, Revival, is vintage King. It’s the perfect mix of baby boomer nostalgia (think Stand By Me) – this guy remembers the 60s with details you usually can only find in photographs – and good old American horror, the kind that was first elevated by such minor writers as, say, Poe and Hawthorne. The story here centers on a reverend who comes to a New England town, befriends and mentors a young boy, and then goes wild with grief when his family dies in an accident; he gives a blasphemous sermon and is, basically, run out of town. Cut to: a couple decades later, when the boy, now a junkie, meets up by chance with the disgraced clergyman, and they form another disturbing relationship. Reverend Jacobs, it turns out, was always more complicated than the stereotypical man of God – he is fascinated by electricity, by science – and pretty demonic, too. How he and Jamie find and fight each other over their lifetimes is as shocking and inevitable as the explosive and, yes, horrorish, climax of the book. Never mind that King’s prose can sometimes lapse into laughable cliché – “like water through a sieve”? Really? – there is absolutely no better storyteller than Stephen King, who keeps us up at night, with fear and fascination and admiration. –Sara Nelson
Review
“King continues to point out the unspeakably spooky weirdness that lies on the fringes of ordinary life… No one does psychological terror better than King. Another spine-tingling pleasure for his fans.” ― Kirkus Reviews
“King fans won’t find anything to complain about here. At just over 400 pages it’s one of his quicker reads and any hint of the supernatural is blended with tender moments that ground the characters….If this is your first King novel, it’s not a bad choice. You don’t need to know anything about his oeuvre coming in, and if you like the writing style, there are dozens of other King books you’ll probably enjoy.” ― Associated Press
“Revival finds King writing with the infectious glee that has always been at the heart of his popular success… Older and wiser each time he writes, Mr. King has moved on from the physical fear that haunted him after he was struck by a van while out walking to a more metaphysical, universal terror. He writes about things so inevitable that he speaks to us all.” ― The New York Times
“Stephen King’s splendid new novel offers the atavistic pleasure of drawing closer to a campfire in the dark to hear a tale recounted by someone who knows exactly how to make every listener’s flesh crawl." ― Washington Post
“Revival is dark, disquieting and pretty horrifying, revealing a mind (the narrator’s, for sure; King’s, perhaps) searching for answers to life’s age-old questions about life and death.” ― Minneapolis Star Tribune
“Revival is among King’s very best…tender, moving and terrifying.” ― New York Daily News
“Worshippers at the Universal Church of Stephen King have a lot to rejoice about with his latest literary sermon. Revival is a dark and haunting tale about old-time religion and one man's search for a mythic ‘secret electricity.’ At the same time it's an emotional and spectacular coming-of-age tale that spans 50 years of horrific tragedy and human redemption… Revival is often heartfelt, as characters deal with painful loss, and the author invests you wholly in the separate journeys of Jamie and Charlie as they arrive at their inevitable crossroads and a voltaic endgame. Say hallelujah, for the King has risen to the occasion once again.” ― USA Today
“This is King’s darkest novel in quite a while… King retains his aw-shucks accessibility and writes about addiction and shattered bones with the insight of personal experience… Revival is a wrestling match between faith and science, and watching King throw himself into that eternal theological debate within the context of a horror novel is fascinating. This is the sort of book he couldn’t have written when he was younger; it’s the work of someone who has lived a long life and experienced its highs and lows.” ― Miami Herald
“It’s a good, scary story, but it’s so much more. Every page is a treasure trove of detail about daily life in America, in the 1960s or whatever decade King’s story lights on. There are tiny stories within stories, and headlines, road signs, soapsuds, state fairs, storefronts … It’s pure poetry.” ― Raleigh News and Observer
“Revival is easily his best work in years…fresh…an excellent, simply written story…filled with suspense and curiosity, it’s a one-day read for King fans.” ― Boston Herald
“As with most of his work Mr. King excels at capturing the small moments of the real world, the things that are human and common to everyone. This is a world we all know and recognize. It makes the darkness that lies just beyond our perception seem more real as well.” ― Pittsburgh Post Gazette
“All of the elements that have made King the preeminent American horror author come alive in this ultra-creepy tale of love, loss, evil and electricity…. Riveting.” ― Cleveland Plain Dealer
“Revival buzzes with allusions to horror classics….Revival gives familiar themes—the relationship between science and religion, the fine line between grief and madness—new power. It’s King in electrifyingly fine form.” ― Tampa Bay Times
“As the Kingian references pile up, and become layered into the events of the fictional world, you fall deeper and deeper under the story’s spell, almost believing that Jamie’s nightmarish experiences actually happened…reading Revival is experiencing a master storyteller having the time of his life. All of his favorite elements are at play – small town Maine, the supernatural, the evil genius, the obsessive addict, the power of belief to transform a life…it is fun to map it all out, to experience King’s mind at work.” ― New York Times Book Review
“A fresh adrenaline rush of terror from Stephen King…Maine, rock and roll, engaging characters and a pounding build to a grisly end – this is vintage King.” ― People
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Scribner; First Edition (November 11, 2014)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 405 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1476770387
- ISBN-13 : 978-1476770383
- Item Weight : 1.65 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.5 x 1.5 x 10 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #438,588 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #23,573 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- #26,128 in Suspense Thrillers
- #26,663 in American Literature (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Videos
Videos for this product

0:31
Click to play video

Revival by Stephen King
Publisher Video
About the author

Stephen King is the author of more than fifty books, all of them worldwide bestsellers. His first crime thriller featuring Bill Hodges, MR MERCEDES, won the Edgar Award for best novel and was shortlisted for the CWA Gold Dagger Award. Both MR MERCEDES and END OF WATCH received the Goodreads Choice Award for the Best Mystery and Thriller of 2014 and 2016 respectively.
King co-wrote the bestselling novel Sleeping Beauties with his son Owen King, and many of King's books have been turned into celebrated films and television series including The Shawshank Redemption, Gerald's Game and It.
King was the recipient of America's prestigious 2014 National Medal of Arts and the 2003 National Book Foundation Medal for distinguished contribution to American Letters. In 2007 he also won the Grand Master Award from the Mystery Writers of America. He lives with his wife Tabitha King in Maine.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviews with images
-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
The story’s protagonist Jamie Morton meets his new Pastor as an eight year old child in the year 1963. As is the case in many of King’s tales, this one is located within his own state of Maine. The fictional hamlet is Harlow, and within it we are introduced to Jamie’s extended family, a few local personalities, and a charismatic young Pastor named Charles Jacobs. For reasons unknown to us, a peculiar bond is evident between Jamie and his pastor from their first meeting. Their strange relationship is one that will last sixty years—spanning the length of this novel.
A profound tragedy occurs in the beginning of the story that causes the Pastor to abruptly abandon his religion. The Pastor leaves Harlow, Maine- destination unknown.
One interesting aspect of the pastor’s character is his apparent fascination with lightning and electricity. A preoccupation with science may not be unusual among clergy members- but one can sense there is something ‘off’ regarding his tinkering with electricity. What is not apparent in the beginning is that his obsession with lightning and electricity will have adverse consequences later in the story.
The first third of this book is some of the finest writing Stephen King has produced. Readers are swept up into a fascinating and complex story with well developed and relatable characters. The story is peppered with real-life joys and tragedies. I enjoyed reading how Jamie Morton evolved and changed from a shy boy- to awkward teen- to a confident young man in the span of a few years.
Unfortunately, Jamie’s life takes a tragic turn for the worse in his adult life. The drug addiction that began with his musical career is now uncontrollable- rapidly destroying his health. As Jamie nears death, he is *somewhat* miraculously reintroduced to Pastor Jacobs, now operating a traveling carnival act of his own in Nebraska.
The former Pastor has improved upon his rudimentary experiments with lightning and electricity and incorporated some of them into his carnival act. The reader is led to believe the Pastor is tampering with dangerous and unfathomable forces for some unknown purpose. What is clear by the middle of this story is that the Pastor has abandoned his former religion completely. He uses his harnessed ‘secret electricity’ to cure various people -including Jamie Morton- of their physical afflictions. As is often the case with miraculous cures, everything is not what it seems. Nevertheless, Charles Jacobs performs these miraculous medical feats and develops a modicum of fame and wealth mid story.
One aspect of this novel I enjoyed was the frequent tie-ins or references to Kings other works. The town of Castle Rock is mentioned upon occasion, and the city of Jerusalem’s Lot can be seen from a vantage point atop nearby Goat Mountain. The vampire grimoire ‘De Vermis Mysteriis’ is mentioned by the Pastor. It is unclear whether he has this text of forbidden knowledge in his possession, but I immediately suspected the story was spiraling toward a tragedy when Jacobs mentioned he read from it.
Fans of Stephen King the horror novelist may be disappointed in this novel as much of it seems focused on the grim realities of life associated with the passage of time. Untimely deaths, suicides, drug addiction, and murder are subjects adroitly addressed in Kings masterful prose. Still, I found much of it thought provoking; we always wonder how much our decisions and outcomes in life are affected by fate versus willpower.
In the final thirty pages of Revival Stephen King at last rewards us with his unleashed imagination. I won’t spoil the ending, but I will hint that it meshes Lovecraftian horror with a subtle nod to Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein.
In the end Stephen King ambitiously and convincingly tackles a broad variety of subjects in this well researched novel. The characters all evolve and change commensurate with the passage of time. In the end, with the exception of Pastor Jacobs, all remain identifiable with their original, younger selves. I found some plot threads near the conclusion to be a trifle disappointing as a reader, but I still believe this is a heartfelt and worthwhile read. Five stars for this gem of a novel.
Revival is the tale of a pastor, Charles Jacobs, who meets the book's main character, Jamie Morton, as a youth in Maine. Jacobs' fascination with electricity causes the two lives to intersect in a tale that spans sixty years. To give anything more away would take away the great delight King exhibits as we see how time has changed the two, how their opinions and outlooks alter throughout time but how they always seem, at their core, to be a shadow of their younger self.
Suffice to say, the magnificent scope of this novel is tremendous. King's unparalleled and signature focus on characters changing throughout the years, his capability to develop these personalities and show their growth and change without losing the intimate details of the relationship between Jacobs and Morton is just as incredible as the epic feel of the work itself. He shares hardships, young joys, adult grievances with the two and we, as the audience, can't help but think that in such a relatively small span we have been with these two fictional characters all our lives. That is another aspect of King's writing which is admirable: his ability to find flawed, yet relatable characters, and all of the many characters who populate Revival prove this time-tested reality.
If there is a negative side to the work it is that it often seems plodding, yet this is a sacrifice made to getting to etch out the characters in more fine detail, and those who are looking for an all-out assault of Horror may be let-down. There were times when I was, though this is not really a logical criticism given that King has always put characters at the forefront of the tale and never used them as they do in many terror films and books these days as simply props for one shock after another, but when he decides to let the world of dread bleed into the personalities which dwell upon these pages we, as the audience, are hit far harder because of it. Some scenes, even early on, that are truly frightening because we realize that these are not fictional creations which we can scoff at and tell ourselves, "It's just a story." King uses real life tragedies that occur to anyone at any time and this is the type of horror that crawls under your skin slowly and upsets us the most and we can tell through the events that transpire in Revival that King himself is fully aware of this fact and never wants us to look away from the actuality of such circumstances taking flight of our lives.
It is this randomness of events, which we all are made painfully aware since we ourselves are young that is a large factor of life, which makes this novel so potent and quietly powerful. King works, not on a visceral level, but on a subconscious arena and reminds of our own fate and that makes the last thirty pages, where he lets his imagination took full reign of the word he pens and his creativity and ideas about what lies beyond the door to the afterlife takes flight, amongst the most gripping conclusions he has ever written.
What fellow faithful King audiences will also enjoy is the subtle and distinct connection to other works of his. On occasion this threw me out of the book but it still delighted me and I only admired him and the volume more for this clever mentions of his prior writings. They are well-planted details that only the most seasoned constant reader will pick up upon and what is also unique is how well they are woven into the fabric of the story.
Just as admirable as this is how he plays with the title word: Revival. The characters go through this renewal, as does the story as it mares into more speculative territory near the finale, Jacob's obsession with electricity and lightning ( though it leads to a fairly predictable scene in the last one hundred pages which is a bit of a cringe-worthy nod to Mary Shelley's Frankenstein) is the obvious play on the word but, like how all the details in the novel are swept into a clean pile of conclusions in the end, King seems to be connecting everything on both a storytelling and in a symbolic manner together. This is one of the most subtle aspects of the book yet, because of its slyness, it is one of the ones which left me the most delighted.
In true King style, Revival is remarkably well-rounded. It blends character study, real life atrocity, intellectual discourse and a wonderful range of subjects into a tale that, though occasionally slow, burrows under the skin and lingers in the mind well after. This is not a restoration of King into a new style but it shows direction towards future roads which he may take his fellow readers to and showcases beautifully why King's written flair and capability is a one of a kind credit to the literary world, he gives us the whole range of the dramatic and the fearful in his prose, and why whatever paths he may dare cross, whatever subjects he may address in his prior work we will always be there to take the journey through his penned landscapes with him. Revival is one of King's many adventures which are well-worth taking.
Top reviews from other countries
Całość czyta się całkiem dobrze, wszak to King. I pomysł na fabułę też jest dobry, ale jest tu stanowczo za dużo wypełniacza nabijającego wierszówkę i nic poza tym.
The characters are beautifully drawn, essentially, though it comes down to two major players in this fine literary game. The six year old Charles Jacobs, who meets and immediately befriends the town's brand new reverend, who is the story's second main character. It is fair to say 'something happens' to this much liked Man Of God right at the book's opening section, but that would be too much of a corny theft of Mr King's principal story telling tool. And yet it does, and it affects the Preacher Man deeply. SPOILERS prevent me from explaining myself here, but its a shocking twist, and of course its beautifully written and goes a long way to ensuring the reader finds themselves addicted to the story just like the classic King tales of the past.
Stephen King is real. His books are real. His writing is real. There is a quote in page 26 of the kindle version which supports this claim and gifts the reader with the uneducated layman's view of the different denominations of modern day Christianity. And when Mr King moves from the everyday to the suppositions presented by the book, he doesn't leave his lyrical talents at home, either.
I said at the top of this review that the book is part romance, and its true. Its a beautiful coming of age story, with just a *hint* of sex thrown in to keep the reader interested. And when the relationship in question is finally consummated, it must be said that its portrayed with the maximum amount of class. The writing style used by Mr King, too, is worthy of great praise, presenting the story in pseudo journal form, breaking down relatively long chapters with shortish but highly readable sub-chapters.
It takes a while for the true character of the book to become obvious, but when it does, the true value of the story jumps sky high. Revival by name, its also revival by nature. Mr King once said in his classic IT, "don't f*** with the infinite" and this moral also holds well if it is applied to the contents of REVIVAL.
REVIVAL does not gift the reader with an overly happy ending. SPOILERS. The book is not funny. It is, however, an immensely satisfying, fascinating, horrific, slightly sexy, hugely enjoyable romp from the town of BLISSFUL DOMESTICITY to the village of TOTAL MADNESS. Constant Readers may well find themselves with tears of joy in their eyes as the book comes alive in their bands. I know i did, and they perfectly matched the grin of complete lunacy the crept across my face to keep them company. New residents of King manor may well wonder what the fuss is all about. But read on, and find themselves hooked they will. But how to explain the effect Sai King has on the world? Its simple.
Something happens.





















