Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Billy Summers

Rate this book
Billy Summers is a man in a room with a gun. He’s a killer for hire and the best in the business. But he’ll do the job only if the target is a truly bad guy. And now Billy wants out. But first there is one last hit. Billy is among the best snipers in the world, a decorated Iraq war vet, a Houdini when it comes to vanishing after the job is done. So what could possibly go wrong?

How about everything...

517 pages, Hardcover

First published August 3, 2021

Loading interface...
Loading interface...

About the author

Stephen King

2,620 books863k followers
Stephen Edwin King was born the second son of Donald and Nellie Ruth Pillsbury King. After his father left them when Stephen was two, he and his older brother, David, were raised by his mother. Parts of his childhood were spent in Fort Wayne, Indiana, where his father's family was at the time, and in Stratford, Connecticut. When Stephen was eleven, his mother brought her children back to Durham, Maine, for good. Her parents, Guy and Nellie Pillsbury, had become incapacitated with old age, and Ruth King was persuaded by her sisters to take over the physical care of them. Other family members provided a small house in Durham and financial support. After Stephen's grandparents passed away, Mrs. King found work in the kitchens of Pineland, a nearby residential facility for the mentally challenged.

Stephen attended the grammar school in Durham and Lisbon Falls High School, graduating in 1966. From his sophomore year at the University of Maine at Orono, he wrote a weekly column for the school newspaper, THE MAINE CAMPUS. He was also active in student politics, serving as a member of the Student Senate. He came to support the anti-war movement on the Orono campus, arriving at his stance from a conservative view that the war in Vietnam was unconstitutional. He graduated in 1970, with a B.A. in English and qualified to teach on the high school level. A draft board examination immediately post-graduation found him 4-F on grounds of high blood pressure, limited vision, flat feet, and punctured eardrums.

He met Tabitha Spruce in the stacks of the Fogler Library at the University, where they both worked as students; they married in January of 1971. As Stephen was unable to find placement as a teacher immediately, the Kings lived on his earnings as a laborer at an industrial laundry, and her student loan and savings, with an occasional boost from a short story sale to men's magazines.

Stephen made his first professional short story sale ("The Glass Floor") to Startling Mystery Stories in 1967. Throughout the early years of his marriage, he continued to sell stories to men's magazines. Many were gathered into the Night Shift collection or appeared in other anthologies.

In the fall of 1971, Stephen began teaching English at Hampden Academy, the public high school in Hampden, Maine. Writing in the evenings and on the weekends, he continued to produce short stories and to work on novels.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
73,248 (42%)
4 stars
66,825 (38%)
3 stars
24,496 (14%)
2 stars
5,235 (3%)
1 star
1,768 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 18,338 reviews
Profile Image for Emily May.
2,109 reviews315k followers
October 1, 2021
A stranger came, and he turned into a neighbour, but here's the punchline, he turned out to be a stranger all along.

I can't say I liked everything about Billy Summers, but I did find myself reaching for it whenever I had a spare minute, eager to know what was next for this rugged antihero with his closet full of trauma.

Sometimes King dives in with a creative (and often wacky) plot with lots of original touches (think It, Pet Sematary, Sleeping Beauties) but he's also a pro at taking on tired subjects and breathing new life into them. Here he takes a trope that is almost a subgenre in itself - that of the "one last job" spy/detective/assassin - acknowledges it in the text and invites us on his own exploration of it.

The writing and dialogue are strong, as I would expect from King at this point. Billy Summers is a hired killer set to retire and disappear into obscurity after he completes this one last job, but it's a job like no other. It requires him to play a role for a duration of weeks, or even months, and befriend his neighbours, before his target is in sight. His cover is that he is an author writing a book.

I found Billy likeable, the kind of character who will do the morally questionable stuff to survive, and punish those who deserve it, but still stays quite firmly on the hero side of antihero, in my opinion. Alongside befriending his neighbours and beginning to feel shittier and shittier for deceiving them, Billy really does begin to write a book. His own story.

What emerges is a tragic history, of course. I "enjoyed" reading about Billy as a child and adolescent, if enjoyed can be the word. The scenes in Fallujah were less gripping for me, simply because I've never had much interest in war stories.

It's a compelling plot with strong characters, especially the eponymous protagonist, and an overall quite touching message about what it is to be a writer, the freedom it offers, as well as the ability to shape worlds to your liking. The (sort of) romance felt weird for numerous reasons, even with Billy openly acknowledging them.

HUGE warning for graphic depictions of violence, sexual assault, and post-assault trauma.
Profile Image for Regina.
1,139 reviews4,309 followers
September 2, 2021
Crime fiction. That’s what Billy Summers is. Let’s get that out of the way from the outset so Uncle Stevie’s Constant Readers can prepare themselves accordingly and the “I’ve never read Stephen King!” people can open their minds to finally giving him a try.

And I do hope they will, because Billy Summers is a damn fine book by any measure. Many are saying its his best in years, and I have to agree with them. It’s a non-horror jewel in King’s crown that could possibly be mistaken for a novel by an author like S.A. Cosby or maybe even Dennis Lehane. No horror, no ghosts. (Well, unless you count the ghosts of King’s canon that float through the story in the form of delightfully placed Easter eggs. I see you, clown in the backseat! I adore you, Overlook Hotel hedge maze!)

While Billy Summers the book comes close to perfection, Billy Summers the character is imperfectly perfect. He’s an Iraq war sniper who puts his post-battle skills to use as a hitman for hire. But he’s a hitter with a heart of gold, because he only takes jobs to take out “bad people.” (Yes, it’s a little “Barry” meets “Dexter.”) The first part of the novel meanders through the set up of his character and his “final job,” and then at the midway point it takes off in a direction I never saw coming. And that direction is in the form of a relationship between two characters I’ll remember for a long time.

Billy Summers also features the book-within-a-book device, because Billy is writing a memoir about his childhood and war experiences. Readers get even more context to his motivations through those sections.

Now, there is violence. There are very graphically described sexual assaults. There is a lot of anti-Trump sentiment. BUT, there is a beautiful ending. King has finally landed the plane on the runway of repletion.

This one did indeed leave me satisfied from start to finish. Thanks, Uncle Stevie.

Blog: https://www.confettibookshelf.com/
Profile Image for Nilufer Ozmekik.
2,784 reviews55.1k followers
October 5, 2024
Stephen King's Billy Summers is a masterful blend of suspense, character study, and moral contemplation. The story follows a hitman, Billy Summers, who is about to retire but takes one final job that goes deeper than expected. King's portrayal of Billy is nuanced, presenting him as a man grappling with his own sense of justice and morality. The novel skillfully balances the tense world of crime with heartfelt moments of introspection, as Billy not only confronts his past but also his place in a world that seems to offer no redemption. King fans will appreciate the intricate plotting, slow-burn suspense, and rich character development that make this novel an unforgettable experience. A powerful meditation on good and evil, Billy Summers showcases King's remarkable ability to tell stories that haunt you long after you finish the last page.

—————-

Each time I start a new KING novel, I feel like a child open up new Christmas gift box! Yes,I'm feeling like celebrating Christmas in August! Yaaaaayyy to me!
Profile Image for megs_bookrack.
1,946 reviews12.8k followers
November 16, 2024
I promise I will write a review for this one day. I promise! I am so far behind on reviews right now. It's insanity.



Full review to come...stay tuned!!!

Earlier:



My preorder has arrived! I can't believe I am starting my most anticipated book of the year!!!

Original:

Brace yourselves, Constant Readers. This is it.



An all-new 500+ page novel from the King is being released on August 3, 2021!!!

This sounds like a taut thriller, with no doubt a healthy dose of dark themes, and I'm so here for it!!!



Preorder placed.
Profile Image for Geonn Cannon.
Author 108 books206 followers
December 24, 2021
This is quite easily the worst Stephen King book I've ever read. It drags on... and on... and on... and then when he can't think of a way to drag the story out any farther, he shifts gears to a completely different plot that drags... on... and on... and on... until eventually the end of the book is like a completely different novel than the one you started reading. And Billy is such a bland nothing of a character that I never even bothered to get a mental picture of what he looked like. He was a lump of clay bouncing from one situation to the next. And hey, you guys like The Shining? Because he literally has a character stand on a hill, point, and basically say "Look, that's where The Shining took place, that's cool right? Y'all remember The Shining? That was great." It was Ready Player One level of reference porn, made even worse because it was King referencing himself.

Disappointing to say this as a King fan, but this one is absolute trash. I'm not even listing the dates I read it so it won't show up on my 2021 reading list. I'd rather just forget I ever read it.
Profile Image for Ginger.
900 reviews496 followers
September 15, 2024
I was not expecting to enjoy this new book by Stephen King as much as I did!

I’ve unfortunately become more critical as I get older of my favorite authors. I know they’ve put out great books in the past and I try to keep my fangirl in check.
It’s almost more pressure on them because of this mindset!

But with Billy Summers, I can say that this book is well done!

If you are looking for horror, you’ll not find it here.

The only horror you will find in the book is bad men and the actions they take. The fact that this is not horror might sway some King fans away, but I’m happy with him putting out books for different genres!

Billy Summers is about a hired killer. He has decided to do one last job, but he doesn’t realize how complicated the hit is going to get.

One of the great things in the plot is Billy’s disguise while waiting to do the hit.
He's disguised as a writer and living in the suburbs. He comes to live in Red Bluff and decides to write a book while he waits.

I really enjoy the book in a book theme. And it really works in this.

Billy writes about his life and the layers just start peeling off, one at a time.
He is a grey character and I love these characters the best. In his book, you see he’s not a good man, but he’s not an evil one either.

His upbringing and combat experience have slowly made him who he is when we meet him for the first time. I loved Billy and I loved how King puts a spotlight on veterans and the struggles they endure when they get back to their country. Well done sir, well done.

I can see two things that people might struggle with in this book:

✔️ It’s a bit slow in the beginning. The book slogs a bit until the hit happens. I do not have issues with a slow build, but I can see how this would offset some readers.

✔️ And the last thing is King takes some jabs at Trump and MAGA voters since this is set in a deep red state.
He doesn’t necessarily get political; he just shows how much he doesn’t like the guy and struggles with hatred that’s directed at immigrants in this country.
And if you don’t know this about King, I’m sure his Twitter account will tell the tale. 🧐🤣

I do hope King gets away from the slight political digs not because I don’t agree with him (I very much do!), but I don’t necessarily want that in a fiction book about a hired killer.

Other then that, I loved the characters.
I loved the ending and thought it was fitting. Powerful stuff!
Profile Image for J.D. Barker.
Author 34 books6,000 followers
June 6, 2021
Wow. This might be Stephen King’s best yet. The ending is perfection. Releases August 3 - get your preorders in!
—J.D. Barker, NY Times bestselling author of A Caller's Game
Profile Image for David Putnam.
Author 19 books1,881 followers
August 27, 2021
Loved this book King is a true master craftsman. Billy Summers is written in third person, first person, with multiple points of view and jumps tenses, past and present. He does it seamlessly and if you’re not watching it’s easy to miss.
Billy Summers is an antihero and follows in the footsteps of some of the great antihero’s created by Richard Stark and Jim Thompson. He is a killer for hire with a conscience. He’ll only kill if the person deserves it. When his contractor double crosses Billy, he goes after them to make it right. Not unlike Payback a great book that has been made into a movie twice, once with Lee Marvin and once with Mel Gibson. Of course, in King’s capable hands this iteration has far more depth of character. Though Billy is breaking the law he lives by a code and sticks to it. One of my favorite kind of stories. King also tells two stories the current and the past. He does this by having the character write a book. Billy shares some the pages to this book with the reader. It’s truly a brilliant vehicle, the backstory is told without stopping the forward motion of the current day story.
Billy Summers is a crime novel, a romance and a revenge story all in one interwoven with verve and enough emotions to pull the story along. At the same time evoking a tear now and again.
This one is going up in the top four King novels: Bag of Bones (what a wonderful read), Tommy Knockers, The Stand, 11/22/63 and Full Dark No Stars.
I highly recommend this book.

David Putnam author of the Bruno Johnson series.
Profile Image for Bradley.
Author 5 books4,605 followers
August 7, 2021
Frankly, I’m always happy to read a Stephen King.

It’s as easy as that.

He never disappoints.

Case in point: Billy Summers could easily have turned out to be a Dexter-like romp or a thriller in the vein of all hit men. It could have turned out a Stockholm-type romance spiced up with a little revenge and moral outrage to get all those types of juices flowing, too.

And make no mistake, Billy Summers DOES have those elements.

But King is a king of subversion when it comes to plots. He welcomes us down those long dark paths, leading us to believe that that monster WILL be down one, but the real monster isn’t there. It’s actually in your back pocket all along.

And I loved it from start to finish. Intelligence, the burden and release of art in a most unexpectedly delightful way, and real connection. I was invested from start to finish not only for the initial hook but MORE for all the wonderful extras.

King rocks.
Profile Image for Beata.
856 reviews1,305 followers
August 7, 2021
Some may say that Mr King chose a theme that has been covered in several books earlier, and they are right, however, I just enjoyed meeting Billy and that is what matters to me.
Billy's background is what shaped him and yet despite calling himself a bad man, he recognizes evil when he sees it, which means that he is not totally lost in my eyes. Moreover, what he does for Alice, a young woman mistreated brutally, while thinking about the little sister he lost tragically in childhood, shows that empathy is still in him.
Billy's story gripped me, yes, and my stars are for the reading pleasure I was offered by Mr King. The book is not poetic or intelectually challenging but it ticked several boxes, which was grand.
Profile Image for Justin Tate.
Author 7 books1,263 followers
September 4, 2021
Lots to love, lots to meh. In the end it's a solid feel-good novel in the vein of Shawshank Redemption, Stand By Me and Elevation. Just not as good as any of those.

The major issue is that it takes far too long to reach a premise. Half the book must drudge by before we understand what we're reading—the story of an unlikely pairing, the hitman who only kills bad guys and a young girl who was left for dead.

Their partnering is the highlight of the novel, allowing both characters to emerge as charismatic figures. It's too little too late by that point, however. Many readers will give up before the girl even appears and those of us who trust King enough to march on aren't given a dynamic enough character study to justify the slow chunks.

We cheer on their pursuit to punish the world's "real" bad guys, but their methods are cheesy and without an ounce of suspense. Everything falls into place exactly as we expect. No twist, no surprise.

However, Billy Summers is a surprising spin on the "last job gone wrong" genre and hitman fiction in general. Certainly it is unexpected for a noir protagonist to spend most of his time penning a memoir instead of dodging kingpins and outrunning the law. Pairing him up with a girl whose situation mirrors his own experiences is a clever way to add humanity to the situation. There just isn't enough evidence that this quiet take on the genre is effective.

Ultimately it's not King's best effort, but still a decent adventure with engaging characters and lovely concluding message. Given the choice of King screwing up the beginning or the ending, I would much prefer him to falter at the start. Since it does end so well, I can forgive much of the opening bloat.

PS: Fans will enjoy a number of references to the Overlook Hotel as the characters pass through Colorado country. There are enough mentions of the hotel, and Alice's desire to live in Colorado, that I wonder if King is setting groundwork for another sequel to The Shining.
Profile Image for Marchpane.
324 reviews2,682 followers
October 1, 2021
This one was such a mixed experience for me. I loved the first half—professional hitman on ‘one last job’ embedded in a small town, his ‘cover’ is that he’s a writer so we also get a book-within-a-book about the hitman’s early life. I could see why the reviews were saying this is King’s best in a long time.

But something that happens midway really soured me on this novel. How Billy treats Alice when he finds her and what he does later to attain vengeance on Alice’s behalf disgusted me and made me hate Billy to the point that I could not regain my earlier enjoyment. Yes, I recognise the irony—Billy was a murderer and a ‘bad person’ from the beginning—but these specific acts crossed a fictional line for me, they are presented as heroic and never challenged within the text. Writers need to do better than this when writing about sexual violence (no exceptions for genre fiction, or just because your name is Stephen King).

On this book’s politics: the ultimate villain is clearly modelled on a very politically influential person, and there are about a dozen mentions of Trump throughout the book, usually in the context of whether certain characters are Trump supporters or not. King likes to use historical signposts (in this book he also namedrops Netflix, MacBook, Zillow etc, to the point that it looks like product placement) and that includes political references, but I have another theory about this novel.

King has said in interviews that originally Billy Summers was to be set in 2020. When the pandemic happened, he could not make it work so he moved the setting back to 2019. Was the timeframe so important? Billy Summers is embedded in suburbia in a red state for the better part of a year, with the action finally culminating on Halloween (followed by a 21 November coda). I think this was intended to be—very specifically—an election year novel. Would it have made that much of a difference? Who knows… but it’s intriguing to think about.
Profile Image for Labijose.
1,085 reviews625 followers
January 4, 2022
Una buena novela para comenzar 2022.

¿Qué decir de la penúltima novela del maestro King que no hayáis dicho ya los demás? ¿Que su fuerte es la construcción de personajes? Check. ¿Que sabe desenvolverse “casi” por igual en su género favorito, es decir, el terror, como en el resto de géneros con el que suele intercalar sus novelas? Check. ¿Que le gusta hablar de escritores, rindiendo un homenaje a su labor, poniéndolos como protagonistas en muchas de sus obras? Check. ¿Que por muchas páginas que contengan, sus novelas se leen de un tirón? Check. ¿Que no le gustan muchos de los aspectos de la sociedad americana en la que vive, y no se cansa de lanzar pullitas al sistema, presidentes incluidos? Check. ¿Que se mantiene al día en cuanto a tecnología se refiere (ya cuenta con 74 primaveras) y que incluso se permite mencionar esta jodida pandemia, metiéndola de soslayo en la trama? Check.

Pues aquí tenemos la historia de Billy Summers, veterano asesino a sueldo con ganas de finiquitar su carrera. Ha vivido el horror de Faluya (Irak) y ha perdido a gente por el camino. Ahora acepta un último encargo, pero, a pesar de realizarlo con éxito, surgirán complicaciones. Sabe demasiado. No puede irse de rositas a disfrutar de su dinero. Hay malos que tratarán de impedírselo. Pero él es Billy Summers, avisados estáis.

Novela de redención donde las haya, y para ello nuestro protagonista compartirá el papel con Alice Maxwell, una joven que sufre el drama de los abusos sexuales. Juntos emprenderán un viaje de amistad y venganza, para mí, lo mejor de la obra. Alice convencerá a Billy para que finalice el retrato de su vida, retrato que Billy comenzó como mera distracción, pero que acabará siendo su confesionario emocional. Al final, ella terminará por ser el motivo de la debacle de Billy, pero, ¡qué diantres!, el viaje habrá merecido la pena.

Y sí, hay una mención al hotel Overlook de “El resplandor”. Y un cuadro que parece que cobra vida propia. Detalles que el maestro no puede dejar de mencionar. No en vano es el causante de tantas pesadillas nocturnas. Y aún así, volvemos a leerlo una y otra vez. Nos tiene enganchados. Y que nos dure el hechizo.

Profile Image for Peter.
3,671 reviews678 followers
August 22, 2021
For many readers the most awaiting book of the year. It made me very curious when picking it up. In the first part you'll find King meeting up with Jack Reacher. Billy Summers, a hitman and former sniper, takes over his last job. He assumes the fake identity as a writer (!) and soon troubles begin. He doesn't trust his client, then there is a young girl named Alice, an old buddy of his, Bucky, and a story full of revenge and getting owed money. Oh, where's the horror? As a true King fan you can easily guess what memories of the past lie hidden in Colorado (I don't give any spoilers). But that part was told in a brilliant way. At the end of the story you'll even find two endings... This was a great King novel. We have a modern war (Irak, seen from Billy's perspective), a strong female character (Alice) and some fine crime story with a shot of horror rolling along. The characters were great, the setting unusual, very entertaining, this will be a great movie in near future, I'm sure about it. Couldn't put the book down. Probably his most unusual book so far. Liked it and can highly recommend reading it.
Profile Image for Farrah.
221 reviews770 followers
September 28, 2021
A quick review because I don't have a lot of time, plus I'm not too crazy for books about hitmen or crime syndicates. I only read this because it's King. I haven't missed any of his books before and I don't plan to start now 🤩
As always, I enjoyed marveling at his wonderful storytelling and the way he intertwines past books. There's a great reference to The Shining here!
Profile Image for Kevin Kuhn.
Author 2 books662 followers
October 7, 2021
Warning – sexual assault and PTSD triggers in this book.

Like a tightrope walker, Stephen King toes some fine lines in this novel. It’s all about balance, and while he wobbles and sways a few times, imho he ultimately succeeds. Billy Summers is a killer for hire, an Iraq war vet that is willing to use his considerable talents, if the pay is right and the target is a ‘bad guy.’ This is the first wobble, is killing ever justified? Billy struggles with it and King wants you to, as well. Through his writing, you’ll find it hard not to like the guy, but there is always this little nagging issue – he’s a murderer for hire, after all.

Another stagger on the rope, the plot itself is a trope, or even several tropes - “Hired Killer gets Shot at Redemption” or “One Last Job.” King addresses this by taking it head on. Main character - Billy Summers himself recognizes that his own story, his own life is a trope. King wants you to know he understands and he’s marching forward anyway. But he does more than just point it out. He makes sure that his MC is not perfect – he makes mistakes, he forgets little details, and while he’s highly skilled, he’s not infallible. He also introduced a brilliant component to the well-worn plot line. In Billy’s next sniper job, he must become embedded, and the cover story for him, is that he’s a writer, working on a novel. Billy, with much time on his hands, decides to write his own autobiography and it’s this balancing pole that keeps the book from being just a trope. We get to read some of that backstory and dive deep into Billy’s motivations and trepidations. We get to experience his joy of realizing he can write, and King nails this component.

The next tremor on the line, is Billy’s primary relationship during the majority of the tale. I’ll do my best not to make this a spoiler, but if you want nothing about the plot, you may not want to expand this section.

What keeps the story firmly on the line, are the things you might expect from King. The tale hooks you quickly with authentic-feeling characters and lots of possibilities in the plot. King inserts little observations of life & people that fire the synapses in my brain. I also have been enjoying King’s occasional departure from the supernatural. This is a straight up action-adventure tale and the only supernatural encounter is a fun callout to a prior novel that’s really unnecessary to the plot. Being a King fan, I always enjoy these little connections between his works. Finally, the ending, well the final ending, is fun, and this is an area where King occasionally stumbles. I’ll just say that King gets a bit introspective and pays homage to the joy that writing has brought to his life though this finale.

Four bullet-ridden stars for this carefully written story of a troubled war-hero who’s trying mightily to write the proper ending of his life.
Profile Image for Kimber Silver.
Author 2 books404 followers
October 23, 2023
"There's a man who walks beside me
It is who I used to be
And I wonder if she sees him
And confuses him with me"

~Jason Isbell, "Live Oak"

Billy Summers is an ex-Marine sniper-turned-hitman. He is one of the best at making the shot and getting away clean. Houdini, they call him; he has been at it for years, and it’s time to get out while the gettin’ is good. It seems a simple plot, one most of us have read before, but this story is so much more. It is about life, choices and friendships, and how sometimes the Fates hand out bouquets and sometimes they hand out horror. Our reaction to each determines where we end up.

A word of caution — the beginning is as slow as molasses in January. But while I was wondering if I should continue, King was expertly planting seeds. It all came together about a quarter of the way in, and I knew he had me.

I have been a fan since Carrie scared the bejesus out of me as a kid. I read him religiously for years, and then we drifted apart. Billy Summers has renewed my love for this author. The tension was perfect, I laughed quite often and even shed a tear or two. I adored Billy and his motley crew, and am ever so glad to have met them.

If you are, or have been, a fan of Stephen King, there is an excellent chance you’ll love this one. In my opinion, it is one of his best recent works.

A big thank you to Beata for her tempting review that convinced me to give this one a try!
Here is the link to her review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Profile Image for Elyse Walters.
4,010 reviews11.5k followers
August 4, 2021
Audiobook…. Read by Paul Sparks
…..16 hours and 57 minutes

My overall thoughts….tidbits….but no spoilers….
are as follows:
Great ride….entertaining…often heart endearing….
…more crime thriller/than horror….
…a story within a story….
…mostly ‘gruesome-graphic-lite’….but does include ‘outrage-fallout’ from a ghastly gang-rape. The three-little-evil-pigs: Tripp, Jack, and Hank….have some punishment coming.
…Other characters have payment punishment coming as well.

…I Loved the first few hours…totally hooked.
…Then my interest started to dip for a couple of hours.
…THE LAST HALF OF THE BOOK WAS THE BEST!

Billy Summers may be on the spectrum—‘might’—(readers can decide)….
but, either way, I liked the ‘complex-multifaceted’ guy.
Billy was not an old fart — but a horrific childhood event could have turned him into one.
Billy has killed others (only bad men)—seventeen times—when we first meet him,
but….
we care for Billy Summers—similar in ways we did Dexter.
We also care for…
*Alice Maxwell*

SOME OF THE BEST SCENES OF THIS NOVEL…..are when ALICE and BILLY are together.
The development of the Billy/Alice relationship is genuine—straight from the heart. Wonderful journey they take together — and TERRIFIC STORYTELLING!

Alice was a shy, confused, girl, but she was not a dumb girl.
Alice was in shock, humiliated, felt shame, was nauseated, and vomiting when Billy first meets her. Billy saved Alice's life.

Alice knew that Billy was a wanted killer, but Billy was hoping that she would trust him. She does. Alice grows to love Billy.
Billy loves her back. He did not wanna fuck her, he sincerely cared for her.
We witness Alice blossoming- healing- showing up more beautiful.
We also witness changes in Billy - showing up more beautiful

Fun&Funny parts: wigs, fake pregnancy belly, dancing & laughing…..etc.
Unlikable and likable characters.

Puzzling part:
…..a painting on the wall in a summer cabin (voodoo tricks?/!)

Assassinations, hitman adventures, lack of honesty and honor, outlaw mentality/bounty hunters’, shopping sprees, car rides, killings…mystery-suspense…cheating, writing, books, Netflix watching, tensions, love….
and….
ONE LAST JOB…
…..”It is what it is, so fuck it”!
Profile Image for Johann (jobis89).
734 reviews4,498 followers
August 16, 2021
4.5 stars.. but could be 5. Gonna sit on it. But wow, this one really got its hooks into me! Very emotionally invested!
Profile Image for Rebecca.
413 reviews570 followers
November 4, 2021
“When you give pain it leaves a scar. It scars your mind. It scars your spirit. And it should, because hurting someone, killing someone, is no little thing. Take it from someone who knows.”

Billy Summers is a hitman and a decorated former Marine sniper. He's ready to retire, but before he does, he accepts one last job that offers a huge payday that would set him up comfortably for life.
However, as the details come together, Billy notices something feels very wrong. He does not yet know, just how wrong or about the woman he will soon meet who will help him try and set things right.

A page turning thriller that is part war history/introspective, part kick-ass hitman with a heart of gold! There was some serious depth and weight to the auto biographical sections of Billy's story drawing on his violent youth and his time spent at war. The character development as always is flawless.

Half way through the story we are introduced to an unexpected character and this ends up taking the story to a whole other level. The story becomes incredibly dark. Although the novel does not involve any supernatural horror the actions of people throughout the book are just as terrifying.

Stephen King is a true artist. I can’t get enough of this hard-core crime noir vibe he is giving us of late. The book has a dreamy nostalgic tone throughout and I got shivers when a certain hotel made a cameo ;)

If I write anything more I’ll spoil the story, just read this. Everyone. It’s fantastic!

Highly recommend 👌🏻
Profile Image for Sarah {needs active mutuals!} ♡.
585 reviews243 followers
August 16, 2021
Billy Summers is not an all-out horror story from King, it’s about an assassination and has a side-story about the Iraq war.
The most horrifying thing here is the evil actions of men. You’re left hoping that the more vile characters here get their just desserts…
It took me around 200 pages to properly get into it, when the character of Alice was introduced is when the story really picks up the pace for me. It’s as though the spark really comes back into King’s writing at this turning point and it makes me nostalgic. From then on, it’s classic King style at his best. Although Chapter 10, when the hit takes place, is also really good and fast-paced.
Of course there are some Trump jabs thrown in throughout and they work well.

The way Billy and Alice bond by him helping her through panic attacks (he clearly has struggled with some PTSD from the war) by singing the nursery rhyme Teddy Bear’s Picnic is surprisingly sweet. He had to use this tactic to help his comrades out at war too. After what happens to Alice, she is really going to have a hard time coming to terms with that and Billy senses that.
The duo work really well, and I like the interactions between Bucky and Alice as well.

Can we take a minute to (ambiguously) discuss THAT ending please !?! My jaw was on the floor, honestly you are best going into this one as blind as possible, PLEASE try to avoid spoilers for the ending.
In fact, I was pretty captivated by the last 30 or so pages. In my opinion, they were damn near perfection. Solidified me rating this higher than a 4, even if I did find the start a tad slow.
It’s made me want to check out even more of King’s crime-based novels as this one is so well done.

”When I was writing, I forgot to be sad. I forgot to worry about the future. I forgot where I was. I didn’t know that could happen.”

4.5 Stars, rounded up to a 5.

tw:// the aftermath of a horrific assault on Alice
Profile Image for Matt.
1,000 reviews29.8k followers
November 19, 2022
“‘The price on this one is very right. You could do it and spend the rest of your life someplace warm. Drinking pina coladas in a hammock.’ [Nick] busts out the big grin again. ‘Two million. Five hundred thousand up front, the rest after.’

Billy’s whistle isn’t part of the act, which he doesn’t think of as an act but as his dumb self, the one he shows to guys like Nick…It’s like a seatbelt. You don’t use it because you expect to be in a crash, but you never know who you might meet coming over a hill on your side of the road. This is also true on the road of life, where people veer all over the place and drive the wrong way on the turnpike.

‘Why so much?’ The most he’s ever gotten on a contract was seventy K. ‘It’s not a politician, is it? Because I don’t do that.’

‘Not even close.’

‘Is it a bad person?’

Nick laughs and shakes his head, and looks at Billy with real affection. ‘Always the same question with you…’”

- Stephen King, Billy Summers

Billy Summers is a book I probably wouldn’t have picked up if it didn’t have Stephen King’s name at the top of the front cover. And if I had picked it up, I certainly wouldn’t have finished. This novel is an inconsistent stew of tired setups, poorly developed characters, and so many logical gaps that this is mostly a hole, with bits of plot floating around.

But of course this is written by Stephen King, who is not simply one of the world’s bestselling authors – a list that includes a lot of disposable fiction – but the creator of numerous unforgettable masterpieces. Based on reputation alone, this is worth checking out.

Ultimately, I found Billy Summers to be a mess, lacking rhythm and coherence. It feels more like three books stuck together to form one big one. Unfortunately, out of the three parts, only one shows that rare King spark of genius. Yet, at over five-hundred overstuffed pages, no one can accuse King of phoning this thing in. Furthermore, he has gotten to the point where even his failures are worth studying, if only to decide where it fits into his larger body of work.

***

Because this is such a shaggy, shambling novel, taking an incredibly long time for its true purpose to be revealed, it is difficult to summarize without venturing into spoiler-land. Suffice to say, Billy Summers is focused on the title character, a former Marine sniper who served in Iraq, and has now become a professional hitman.

The animating event in Billy Summers is Billy’s decision to accept a contract to kill a fellow hitman, who has been arrested in Los Angeles for murder, and is set to be extradited to the fictional town of Red Bluff in an unnamed southern state.

Right away, two things about Billy are worth mentioning.

First, Billy wants out, and this is going to be his “last job.” The criminal’s last job is among the hoariest of formulas, and King spends a lot of time mentioning that, apparently operating under the belief that acknowledging a cliché somehow freshens it. In reality, this has become its own kind of cliché.

Second, Billy only kills “bad guys.” Again, the criminal with a code is an exhausted trope, and King does nothing to breathe any life into it. If you are expecting King to meditate deeply on “bad” and “good,” you will be disappointed. The moral paradigm of Billy Summers never gets more complicated than black-and-white, decent-and-evil.

***

Billy Summers exists in King’s expanded Castle Rock universe, the alternate world that contains Derry, Jerusalem’s Lot, and Shawshank Prison. We know this because there is an extended – and jarringly unnecessary – callback to one of King’s most famous earlier works. Despite the existence of ghosts, vampires, and other supernatural horrors in King-land, Billy Summers is putatively grounded in basic human reality. Thus, it has to make at least some objective sense.

It does not.

***

Confining myself only to the first third of the novel, there are still enough eyeroll moments to cause a pretty serious headache.

It starts with the plan, which is entirely idiotic and doomed to abject failure from the start. To wit: Billy is supposed to kill this incarcerated hitman in Red Bluff while he is being transferred from a jail van to the courthouse for an arraignment. In order to be ready to take this shot, everyone agrees that Billy should live near Red Bluff so that he can be ready whenever the target is extradited.

This is nonsensical, of course. There is absolutely no reason for Billy to wait around town while the target fights extradition. All it does is exponentially increase the likelihood of arrest.

Not only does Billy come into town months in advance, but he does so in the loudest way possible. He is given a memorably unsubtle cover story of a writer; he is given a leased office space; he is introduced to the security guard, and has his picture taken; he spends weeks at the office, getting his fingerprints and DNA everywhere; he meets dozens of people, and even sleeps with one. Instead of taking a small, unobtrusive apartment, he moves into a neighborhood, and immediately insinuates himself into the lives of all his neighbors (which leads me to believe that King no longer knows how neighborhoods work).

For some reason, everyone – including Billy – agrees that embedding oneself in a community preparatory to first-degree murder is a great idea. This is worth noting, as everything that happens in Billy Summers is driven by Billy’s poor decision making, which is usually prefaced by Billy’s realization that he is making a poor decision. Billy falls into the character trap I call the Idiot-Genius Paradox. This is when you have a protagonist who is smart enough to get himself out of any corner, but is also too dumb to avoid corners in the first place.

This is all patently absurd, but easily explicable as a function of King’s obsession with writers, which itself is an offshoot of his obsession with himself.

***

The writer’s plight is one of Stephen King’s most treasured recurring themes. Whether it’s Jack Torrance or Paul Sheldon, King often presents the creative process as a herculean intellectual effort, deserving of our awe and praise.

To that end, big chunks of Billy Summers – as in Misery – are devoted to a book-within-a-book. Yes, that’s right. Once Billy agrees to take on the ridiculous persona of a first-time novelist, he actually decides to write one.

So, while we wait for Billy’s target to arrive – and while Billy makes sure that everyone in Red Bluff can positively identify him as the eventual shooter – we get an extended sequence in which King takes a crack at a war novel.

The thing is, the book-within-a-book sort of works, and I initially thought that Billy Summers might have been a Trojan horse, an unapologetically cheap genre vehicle for King to deliver an entirely different kind of tale than he typically does.

But then King switches things again, and not for the better.

***

King is such a natural storyteller that his weaknesses and tics – the pop-cultural spew, the fat-shaming, the navel gazing – are all usually forgivable. Sometimes, the excess is part of the charm. In Billy Summers, though, I was incredibly aware of the shoddy construction.

I’ve already noted the issues with common sense and characterizations. Beyond that the pacing is all off, and can be roughly capitulated as: extended introduction; long lull; crackerjack action sequence; long lull; a change in plans; a really long lull; a ludicrous and nonsensical action sequence; another long lull; an even more ludicrous and nonsensical action sequence; and then the wrap up. King is also unusually sloppy with regard to narrative imperatives, waiting until late in the third act to reveal the true villain, by which point there’s not enough time to get the audience to care.

Perhaps realizing that things were not working perfectly, King engages in some trickery that he telegraphs with his numerous – and a bit insufferable – literary references. Whether this is enough to save the book, or whether it’s just a sign of desperation, is a personal preference. It didn’t save Billy Summers for me.

***

Stephen King has gotten to the point where he can scratch out a drunken limerick on a napkin and not only get it published, but end up on the bestseller lists. With a half-billion in the bank, he can safely take a risk. In a way, Billy Summers is low-key daring, a weird and unwieldy tome constructed entirely of spare parts. Still, at this stage in his career, it’d be nice to see him go outside his comfort zone, exploring new ideas rather than revisiting the same old motifs.
Profile Image for Melissa ♥ Dog/Wolf Lover ♥ Martin.
3,611 reviews11.1k followers
August 8, 2021
Oh I love to be different!



I’m not going to unhaul my hardback just yet. I’m going to stew on it and maybe reread certain things. I did a skim read at one point due to boredom and King’s crap he puts in all of his new books. I’ll insert my own stuff in here somewhere to throw things off.

I have to say I loved his last book better. What was it called 🤔. I have chemo brain. That noir type book. Anyway……. *its dumb@sses like you that’s ruined the country for the next four years*. I totally loved the Billy bad person killing theme!! That would be so much fun!!!

I love Alice and all he did for her. Makes me mad and sad and happy. I guess I really only loved the last bit of the book so I’m not sure about keeping it.

I love the hell out of the cover. I loved a few things with references to other books that I didn’t skim over: Danny, Tripp, the Overlook.

Anyhoo, that’s all for now.

Mel 🖤🐶🐺🐾
Profile Image for Dave Edmunds.
320 reviews198 followers
August 18, 2021


Anyone who knows me knows who my favourite author is. Just has to be Stephen King.  The guy is a literary legend and a hero of mine. He's the reason I'm a constant reader and why I constantly have a book in my hand. Some people say he's lost his touch. Well, they can now shut the hell up!  In his latest release Billy Summers he proves he's still got it.

It's no secret that King is regarded as the big cheese in horror fiction.  With his influence on the genre and pop culture in general it's pretty much undisputable. But in the last two decades he's branched out and invested a lot of his effort in crime fiction, as he somewhat reinvents himself.  He still dabbles in the supernatural. But in books like the Bill Hodges series, the Colorado Kid and Later we've seen he has developed a passion for hard crime.  With Billy Summers he takes a walk on the dark side as we follow an assassin on his last job before he leaves the criminal underworld for good.

" It goes without saying that he has made a living working for bad people, yes, but Billy doesn’t see this as a moral conundrum. He has no problem with bad people paying to have other bad people killed. He basically sees himself as a garbageman with a gun."

Ex army sniper turned hitman Billy Summers is tired of the violence and working in criminal circles.  He's an anti hero with a moral compass as he only shoots bad guys.  The opening of the story see's Billy presented with the opportunity for a huge pay day for taking out a fellow professional killer.  What could possibly go wrong?

While waiting for his opportunity to take the shot, Billy posses as a writer. Something which he embraces by starting to write his first book.  It's an autobiography, and provides a story within a story where we get to see Billy's history, from childhood and through his time in the military.  It's quite frankly some of the best and most intense aspects of the story and a fantastic device King uses to provide the character development that's a major feature of all his novels.  I enjoyed it immensely.



I was initially reminded of 11/22/63, in the way he has to build an identity within a community whilst looking to assassinate an individual.  Although it starts out fairly formulaic, there's plenty of twists and turns and King takes us in some completely unexpected directions.  I won't go as far as to tell you what's in store, but the narrative is multifaceted with plenty to offer the reader.

The story takes on some heavy subject matter and then winds up going to some surprising places. This is an emotional ride and King uses his ability expertly to pull on the readers heart strings.  Ultimately this is a story about redemption as Billy strives to make amends for the past and turn his life around and have a positive impact, it's so engaging. Can a person who kills people of a living ever be a good person? If, like me, you're a fan of movies like Leon, you'll know how effective this can be.

"Did you know that you could sit in front of a screen or a pad of paper and change the world?"

While Billy Summers probably won’t wind up being heralded as one of his great works of fiction, it is absolutely brilliant.  The sumptuous character development and King's portrayal of life in small town American is a joy to behold.  King sometimes seems out of touch, children still playing monopoly rather than on I Pads, but his writing is as magnificent as ever.

King also goes deep into the art of writing.  He's famous for featuring writers in his stories, as we've seen in Salem's Lot, Misery, the Dark Half and Bag of Bones.  But a fundamental change in this one is that Billy is never writing to sell books and make money.   King instead explores how empowering and cathartic the process can be when you write for yourself. The ability to create new worlds and explore possibilities as well as relive the past. If you're a fan of writing you really will eat this up.

"The door to the past is open,” Summers reflects. “He could push it shut, latch and lock it, but he doesn’t want to. Let the wind blow in.”

My only gripe is King's political commentary. He just can't give up trying to ram it down the readers throat. Every bad character is a republican and all good guys are democrats. Trump is the antichrist and the root of all evil. It would be great if he stuck to Twitter and didn't use his books to air his political views. But honestly don't let that stop you from reading this great book.



There's also the issue of this being a slow burn and taking its time, which may present an issue for some readers. But King's writing is so good I loved those parts. His ability to dissect human behaviour and pick out those aspects that make us who we are is second to none. Yes he can terrify his reader and build suspense, but those slice of life moments are what sets him apart from other authors and this book is loaded with them. Fantastic stuff!

I'll stop there before I bore you to death. My longest review for my favourite author. He deserves nothing less. Just read the damn book and enjoy a true great who's showing us all that he's not lost it. Peace!

[image error]
Stephen King
Profile Image for Ashlynn Calee.
43 reviews2,155 followers
June 2, 2024
6 stars actually ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Profile Image for NILTON TEIXEIRA.
1,141 reviews500 followers
August 16, 2021
2.5 stars.
I’m a big fan of Stephen King and I’ve been reading his works since my teens. I’m now 57 years old and I still enjoy his books and I confess that my expectations were too high, especially after reading amazing reviews, such as this one by Tom Nolan on The Wall Street news: “…Its pleasures are numerous, and it touches the mind, heart and nervous system in equal measure…”
Seriously?
Well… I’m the outlier.
How I struggled with this one. Throughout the book.
This one did not work for me. Not at all.
It offered me zero surprises, except that twist at the end, but by then I was more than late to throw the towel in.
There is nothing extraordinary here.
The writing is excellent, as expected, but the storyline was, in my opinion (gasp!), very boring. I did not get the thrill.
I did find everything very predictable and the characters too hollow.
I found hard to believe in the relationship between Billy and Alice.
As I’m clearly in the minority, I won’t go over the details of my disappointment.
For the prospective readers, I truly hope that you will enjoy this book like so many did.
Happy reading!
Profile Image for Zoeytron.
1,036 reviews860 followers
August 13, 2021
Not horror, nothing supernatural here.  Not sure how to categorize it.  It's Stephen King.  You know how adept he is at spinning a tale. 

Billy Summers.  I want to say that he is a hitman with a heart, but that sounds too icky-poo-poo.  And yet, it enters into the equation, at least in part.  A master of disguise, a magician who can seemingly disappear into thin air after an assassination has been completed.  He does not believe in fate or coincidence.  He has one last job to do.  

There are at least a couple of schools of thought with regard to Stephen King's predilection for including Easter eggs in his novels.  Some find them distracting and pompous.  I think of them as a tip o' the hat to the author's Constant Readers.  If you miss them, it doesn't hurt a thing; if you recognize them, you give a little nod to your own self.  Yep.
Profile Image for Michael.
488 reviews269 followers
August 28, 2021
Billy Summers, a Iraq veteran turned professional assassin, a double crossing mobster and a whole lot in between.

This story just flows so well, the characters are loveable and it's just a really good book in my opinion.

It will be interesting seeing an adaptation put forward for this.

What I really liked also is there's a lot of references/connections to his other books like Alice Maxwell, The Overlook Hotel and Hemingford Home; I really like it when he does this.

Definitely worth a read for fans of crime/thrillers.
Profile Image for bookworm ୭ৎ (hiatus).
155 reviews181 followers
November 7, 2024
˚˖𓍢ִ໋ ౨ৎ ˚ dnf˚ ౨ৎ ˖𓍢ִ໋˚

they should call this “boredom summers” instead :)


────୨ৎ────


˚˖𓍢ִ໋ ౨ৎ ˚ pre-read review ˚ ౨ৎ ˖𓍢ִ໋˚

spooky season = stephen king book 🤭✋🏻
Profile Image for Blaine.
911 reviews1,021 followers
June 14, 2022
He's thinking of all the movies he's seen about robbers who are planning one last job. If noir is a genre, then “one last job” is a sub-genre. In those movies, the last job always goes bad.

“If he was hurt, that would make me happy. I suppose that makes me a bad person.”
“It makes you human,” Billy says. “Bad people need to pay a price. And the price should be high.

“Now tell me what really did happen.”
I never know what to think when someone says that a new book is “the best Stephen King novel in years.” It seems to me that the statement usually says a lot more about the reader than about King himself. Do you prefer his short story collections, his shorter novels, or his doorstoppers? Which of his genres is your favorite—horror, supernatural, fantasy, or the more reality-based ones? Is the latest novel “the best in years” simply because King has cycled back through that person’s favorite combination of length and genre? So, with all that said, please know that I am fully aware of the irony when I say … Billy Summers is the best Stephen King novel in years.

Billy Summers was a Marine sniper during the second Iraq war, and he’s been working as a hit man since he got back home. He agrees to “one last job,” taking out another hitter for $2 million. The job will require him to settle into town for a few months before the hit, and his cover will be that he is a writer, which gives Billy the time to tell the story of his life: his troubled youth, his time “in the suck” in Iraq, how he became a hit man. But things get complicated, and of course nothing is as it seems with his “one last job.” And more importantly, he meets Alice Maxwell….

Billy is a completely believable, complex character who literally carries the story until Alice’s arrival. His backstory is haunting and full of keen observations, especially about the second Iraq war. Alice is an equally great character with her own tragic past, one that links the traumas of Billy’s youth and time in Iraq. Her arrival allows the reader to see a different side of Billy as well as secondary characters such as Bucky. The writing and dialogue is excellent throughout Billy Summers. King fully flexes his technique of using a phrase—the House of Everlasting Paint, the Fun House, the baby shoe—as an emotional shorthand both before and after telling the reader the story behind the phrase. As with other King novels about writing and writers, this novel asks whether writers write for themselves, strangers, or both? And no recent King novel is complete without a few Easter eggs, here to The Shining and, much more subtly, to The Stand (which I never would have noticed except I reread that book last year).

Billy Summers starts out feeling a bit like 11/22/63 morphs first into something like Misery, before shifting again into something altogether new, perhaps closest to the movie The Professional. So why are so many, including yours truly, saying that this novel is King’s best in years? For some, I’m sure it’s because there’s nothing supernatural here, and the only horror is all-too-real. For me, I think it’s that Billy’s and Alice’s stories are just that absorbing. That, and the fact that for all the grief King (unfairly) gets about allegedly not being able to write an ending, Billy Summers has an incredible ending that had me close to tears.

If I’m recommending a Stephen King novel for someone who’s never read one before, I usually go with the classics, depending on the person’s tastes and tolerance for length: The Shining, The Stand, It, Misery, Pet Sematary. But Billy Summers is going into that list. It’s that good. Highly recommended.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 18,338 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.