Summary

Those starting out their journey with Stephen King’sThe Dark Towerseries often have a question: should they read the original version ofThe Gunslingeror the revised and expanded edition?The Dark Towerseries is a seminal work from one of history’s most successful and influential writers,a series told over seven main books, one standalone book, one short story, and countless references and tie-ins from his other novels.The Dark Toweruniverse is Stephen King’s greatest work, and if he were never to write another book again, he’d be a legendary writer for that series alone.

The series all started withThe Gunslinger,which introduces readers to the archetypal loner and heroic figure Roland of Gilead,The Dark Tower’s gunslingerand the last of his world. His life’s quest is to reachThe Dark Tower, the nexus of not just his world, but all worlds, and protect it from the forces of chaos that would tear it down. Along the way, he meets companions that aid him on his quest, but the first, Jake Chambers, becomes an integral part of the first book. Of course,The Gunslingeralso introducesStephen King’s greatest villain: the Man in Black, a.k.a. Randall Flagg. It’s the start of an epic story, but there are two different versions of the novel, leading to questions about which one is better.

Covers of Stephen King’s Dark Tower books

How To Read Stephen King’s Dark Tower Books & Stories In Order (Chronologically & By Publication Date)

The universe of The Dark Tower is sprawling and vast and it can help to know how to read the books & in which order to read them before jumping in.

It’s More Cohesive & Fixes Some Continuity Issues

For those completionists who want to be thorough,the revised and expanded edition ofThe Dark Tower:The Gunslingeris the best way to go.Stephen King released the revised and expanded edition in 2003, decades after the original version was released. The original version ofThe Gunslingerwas published in 1982, and King had never been fully happy with it as it was a fix-up – that is, a novel that stitches together several short stories into one whole. The original stories had been published between 1978 and 1981, and King realized he had enough to put together in a whole novel; it was then the start of the expansive series that eventually becameThe Dark Tower.

1982

The Dark Tower featuring Roland Deschain, the Gunslinger

1987

1991

The Gunslinger and The Drawing of the Three by Stephen King book cover backgrounds

The Dark Tower IV: Wizard and Glass

1997

1998

2003

2004

The Wind Through the Keyhole

2012

That said, because the originalThe Gunslingerwas a fix-up novel and never something that King had envisioned would spawn anentire interconnectedDark Toweruniverse, it created continuity errors with the later books, and didn’t feel as cohesive in general.The expanded and revised edition fixes a lot of those continuity errorsand makes the first book feel more like a fundamental part of the rest of the series. It’s the equivalent of a director’s cut, the version that King believes is the best version of his story and the one he always wanted to tell.

The original version ofThe Gunslingerwas published in 1982, and King had never been fully happy with it as it was a fix-up – that is, a novel that stitches together several short stories into one whole.

It should be noted that some die-hard Stephen King fans who cut their teeth on the original edition ofThe Gunslingerhave disliked some of the minor changes to wording, andit’s fair to argue that a few lines don’t seem to punch as hard as they did in the original.Still, it can’t be denied that the revised and expanded edition ofThe Gunslingerfits much better with the whole series. For that reason, those who want a smoother entry into the complicated lore of the world should read the revised and expanded edition ofThe Gunslinger.

That said,it’s still worth reading the original, shorter version ofThe Gunslinger.Though it’s an imperfect version of the story and has a few plot holes that cause contradiction later inThe Dark Towerseries, it’s nonetheless a great read. It certainly doesn’t detract from the overall tale to read the original as one’s first book, nor does it really cause story problems later save for those who are incredibly nitpicky readers. However, the most interesting way to read it is after having finished the entire series, in order to see the parts Stephen King changed and expanded and why.

The Dark Towerseries is Stephen King’smagnum opus, the story, the universe that has consumed him and taken up more of his brain space than any other. Watching the way he modified the story is a glimpse into the mind of not just one of the world’s most prolific authors, but also into the creative process itself. Some of the parts he changed were to better flesh out the character of Roland of Gilead. Others were to retroactively correct passages that caused later continuity errors. And still other parts simply revised things he hadn’t been happy with.

Watching the way he modified the story is a glimpse into the mind of not just one of the world’s most prolific authors, but also into the creative process itself.

In the end,it doesn’t really matter if you read the revised and expanded edition ofThe Gunslingeror the original– if you’re able to still find it, that is. The Dark Tower universe is vast and immersive, and whichever version of the first book you read, it still does a fine job of introducing you to the world of Roland of Gilead, and the character. No matter what’s in the pages of each version, the only thing that truly matters is that both start with the iconic first line: “The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed.”

While the original version ofThe Gunslingeris harder to find now, it’s still available in digital editions online and print editions where used books are sold.

10 Moments From Stephen King’s Dark Tower Books That Must Be In Mike Flanagan’s TV Series

Mike Flanagan’s TV adaptation of Stephen King’s Dark Tower series needs to feature several key moments from the books in order to do the story right.