The Running Man

4.4 out of 5

4,784 global ratings

A desperate man attempts to win a reality TV game where the only objective is to stay alive in this #1 national bestseller from Stephen King, writing as Richard Bachman.

“Tomorrow at noon, the hunt begins. Remember his face!”

Ben Richards is a desperate man. With no job, no money, no way out, and a young daughter in need of proper medical attention, he must turn to the only possibility of striking it rich in this near-future dystopian America: participating in the ultraviolent TV programming of the government-sanctioned Games Network. Ben soon finds himself selected as a contestant on the biggest and the best that the Games Network has to offer: The Running Man, a no-holds-barred thirty-day struggle to stay alive as public enemy number one, relentlessly hunted by an elite strike force bent on killing him as quickly as possible in front of an audience all too eager to see that happen. It means a billion dollars in prize money if he can live for the next month. No one has ever survived longer than eight days. But desperation can push a person do things they never thought possible—and Ben Richards is willing to go the distance in this ultimate game of life and death....

“Under any name King mesmerizes the reader.” —Chicago Sun-Times

“No one does psychological terror better!” —Kirkus Reviews

“One of America’s top storytellers.” —Toronto Star

432 pages,

Kindle

Audiobook

Paperback

Mass Market Paperback

First published March 7, 2016

ISBN 9781501144516


About the authors

Stephen King

Stephen King

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.

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Reviews

R. Theisen

R. Theisen

5

Fight The System

Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2020

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A real page turner. I read the book in a day. The story is fairly fast paced. The chapters are small (1-5 pages each). The chapter numbers start at 90 and count down to 0. It’s like a beat the clock type of thing. King’s writing pulls you in and makes you want to keep reading.

The plot is basically that America has become overly obsessed with violence and sex and need to watch violent game shows to get their jollies. The main character is poor and supported by government “welfare”, but has a very sick 18 month old daughter that needs proper medical care, medicine, and a doctor. But due to the (dystopian) class system, the poor folk can only afford black market medication, that usually never really works. He basically says to himself that he’s got nothing to loose. So he chooses to fight the system and try out for one of the violent game shows where he could win $1 billion, but the catch is that you’ll have to survive 30 days outrunning a team of highly trained, heavily armed hunters. Your given a 12 hour head start and you can run anywhere in the world... before the hunters start. Your picture is broadcasted to everyone watching across the country, so the public is in on it too. If someone sees you they can call in a tip and be rewarded.

And one more thing the main character finds out just as the game is about to begin... no contestant has ever made it through the full 30 days without being caught. When the time comes, and the hunters have you surrounded the show breaks into regularly scheduled programming, and your own personal “Waterloo” is broadcast live all over the country.

But the main character is smart, maybe too smart...

It is an easy read and a fast thriller.

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6 people found this helpful

Robbie Cheadle

Robbie Cheadle

5

An excellent dystopian novel

Reviewed in the United States on August 26, 2019

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The Running Man is a dystopian novel visualizing a future world of even greater and more widely distributed poverty than that of our current world. The "Have Nots" live in ghettos and are kept entertained and quiet through a free television system which airs violent and blood thirsty games programmes. The contestants for these games are carefully selected based on specific physical weaknesses such as a heart condition and, while the contestants do win money for their efforts, they always walk away greatly injured or, in the case of the prime time game, The Running Man, dead. The contestants that are selected for The Running Man are troublemakers who the government wishes to get rid of. The television station is under the thumb of the ruling government which aims to maintain the current societal status quo.

Ben Richards is a troublemaker in the eyes of the law. A man who has protested against the lack of heath regulation for low level workers and has been black marked by employers as a result. Ben is married and has managed to have a child, Cathy, despite working in a factory where he was exposed to radiation for years. Now, however, the Richards are struggling to put food on the table and little Cathy is deathly sick with influenza. There is no money for a doctor. Ben's wife, Sheila, turns tricks as a prostitute to obtain some badly needed funds, much to her husband's anguish. In desperation, Ben decides to apply for one of the game shows.

Ben's application is successful and, identified early on in the application process, as a troublemaker, he is allocated to The Running Man. No-one has ever survived this game which requires the contestant to run from the hunters who are out to kill him. The public can join in the game and win but calling in sightings of the contestant to the television studio. No-one is on the runners side which makes surviving extremely difficult. Ben soon discovers that the game is also rigged and the two video cassettes he has to mail to the television studio every day are provided to the hunters to help them determine his location. Ben, however, is a survivor. He is also a man running on hate and this turns out to be a rather bad combination for the hierarchy of the television studio.

I thoroughly enjoyed The Running Man and recommend it to all lovers of dystopian fiction.

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11 people found this helpful

James Mace

James Mace

5

One of King's Greatest Works - Just Don't Expect it to be Like the Film

Reviewed in the United States on August 28, 2018

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Stephen King is one of the greatest storytellers of our time. To be honest, I've always preferred his non-horror works and feel that this is overall one of his best. I found it interesting that he penned this under the pseudonym, Richard Bachman, as it varied so much from what he was most known for, plus he also said he wanted to see if his stories were actually good, or if people were simply buying into his "brand". Some Minor Spoilers Follow While a huge fan of the classic 1987 film adaptation starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, it bears almost no resemblance to the book that was said to have inspired it. In the book, Ben Richards is described as a gangling, pre-tubercular, twenty-eight years old, standing 6'2" and 165 pounds. During one rather 'tight-fitting' situation (which seriously made me claustrophobic) Richards is grateful that he's underfed. He is also not a former police officer / soldier, but destitute and unemployed, married with a sick child, whose wife is compelled to 'turn tricks' in order to put food on the table. The film version of Richards is about twelve years older, unmarried, and well...Arnold Schwarzenegger. Stephen King even said that the book version of Richards was, "as far away from the Arnold Schwarzenegger character in the movie as you can get".

The plot is also very different, with The Running Man taking place all over the country, rather than confined to a single arena. There are also none of the 80s gameshow-style scenes, nor do we see any of the 'stalkers' from the film. Those hunting Richards are almost completely unseen, adding to the suspense, as he has no idea who is coming for him. The names of the main protagonist, as well as a couple of side characters, and the game itself are about the only similarities between the book and film. Both are dystopian in nature, though the film only hints at the rampant poverty and corruption rife throughout the world, while the book slams the reader right in the middle of the deepest squalor, where hope isn't even a pipe dream. The poverty, desolation, and hopelessness of society's poorest are more a part of the story than the sadistic 'game' force-fed onto their televisions (called "Free-Vees") to keep them distracted and from rioting. King is a master of creating characters who we empathise with, and regardless of our own situations in life, can somehow relate to. Because we become so vested in the characters, this book becomes a real page-turner as soon as you start reading. I finished it in just a couple days, at one point staying up until almost 1:00 in the morning because I could not stop. I admit, I was slightly disappointed in the ending, only because I was able to see it coming way too soon, whereas most of the story keeps you on the edge of your seat, unable to know what happens next. Still, this is a very minor criticism, and it does not detract from the story as a whole.

Mind you, the film is still an Arnold Classic (see what I did there?), though it is definitely "80s" in its feel and is in many ways dated because of it. The novel, I feel, remains relevant and is even more of an indictment against rampant poverty and our society today than when it was written in 1982.

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10 people found this helpful

Patrick Henz

Patrick Henz

5

On the edge of reality

Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2024

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Steven King wrote this book around 40 years ago, but still it seems to describe a dystopian future on the edge to become reality. Very different from the movie.

Freddy Iozzino

Freddy Iozzino

5

Great Book

Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2024

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Fun read. Couldn’t put it down….. which really annoyed my wife. lol

Ed

Ed

5

Good quality

Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2024

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Good read

Violet Crumbles

Violet Crumbles

4

I Highly Recommend It

Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2019

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I loved this one. It is my favorite of all the Kings I've read. It is quite different from your average King book and story. Primarily, it isn't overly wordy and self-indulgent. Except for chapter "minus 056" (which I would have cut), not a word is wasted. This one is tight, intelligent, observant and beautifully, artfully tells a very compelling story. I was hooked from page one, and read it in two sittings yesterday.

I have been trying to like King for years, with little success. But I think I have found my way to him through Bachman, who (I suppose) allowed King to not be King for a bit. There is the usual awkward dragging in the last third, typical of King (what is it with him and endings?), but it is much less jarring and problematic here. I was not thrown out of the story by it, thankfully - which allowed me to receive the 11th hour sucker punch right on cue. Superb story... SO much better than the clownish movie that was ostensibly made from it.

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16 people found this helpful

Denise M. Cosnahan

Denise M. Cosnahan

4

Gift

Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2024

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They liked it but wasn’t there favorite

Kindle Customer

Kindle Customer

4

I don’t know how the man has time to think let alone write all he does!

Reviewed in the United States on June 13, 2023

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Steven King writing as Richard Bachman has always been books I look for. I first discovered him with THE BODY, which I think is the only great transfer to film so far in STAND BY ME. The reader/viewer knew those boys! This book is a rougher ride. One keeps being aware that it will was published in 1982, so many of 2023 realities strike too close to home for comfy reading, but there is no doubt that you’ll keep on reading to discover the ending. Mr King, I don’t know how you do it, but please don’t stop.

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B-Goody

B-Goody

3

A 'King' Sci-Fi/Dystopia book that could have been more, 3 and a half stars

Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2012

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'The Running Man' was published in 1982 under Kings pseudonym Richard Bachman. Without ever seeing the movie cause it looked crappy I decided to finally read this book knowing that the book is always better than the movie. And this is not a bad book by any means, it's quite good but I felt that it should have been explained a little better.

The book is about a man, Ben Richards, who is married to his wife Sheila who share a five year old daughter, Cathy, who is dying from Asthma/Lung Cancer. It's why Ben Richards enters the Running Man contest, prize money for a doctor for his daughter. Taking place in the year 2025 the pollution of the air is so toxic that most deaths are lung related and Asthma is always the cause of death. The Games Network, a government operated game show station that runs live all over the world via free-vee(TV). Once the game starts you are free game for anyone in the world, a enemy of the state. The goal is to survive thirty days, 100 dollars per hour or deduct a hundred if you kill someone. No one has ever survived the entire 30 days. Ben meets various people in his trek, whether he can trust anyone or not, his braveness and quick thinking are his strong points. During the games 'Hunters' are sent out to capture the running man, trained elites/assassins. I don't want to give to much else away. It's a very fast read and I mostly enjoyed it, yet I did not expect the ending, and even now I don't know how I feel about said ending. Classic King?(Bachman?)maybe, you decide.

Maybe if the lead character, Richards wasn't such a jerk and a tool, I could have liked him and the book more, so I didn't feel anything for him except for his unfortunate family.

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