Showing posts with label American. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American. Show all posts

Ticktock Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Fiction, Horror, Humor, Literature, Suspense, Thriller

Ticktock

Published: July 1996
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Fiction, Horror, Humor, Literature, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Tommy Phan is a popular mystery author and first-generation Vietnamese American in southern California. His ultimate aim is to live the American Dream. 

The plot begins with Tommy purchasing a new Corvette. He disputes with his mother, declining her invitation to supper. In an act of defiance, he consumes two cheeseburgers, something his mother despises. 

There he encounters a gorgeous waitress (whom he will meet later in the story again). During one of these two travels, his radio stops working, and creepy voices can be heard in the static.

When he returns home, he discovers a Rag doll on his front steps, as well as a message written in Vietnamese that he learned as a youngster but has forgotten in his effort to be a genuine American. 

When Tommy takes the doll inside his study, it breaks open to reveal a terrible entity bent on murdering him. 

Tommy's computer screen is left with a message indicating he has till daybreak, but he has no idea what will happen at dawn. 

They go on a race to flee the beast after encountering Del, a lady who appears to talk rather cryptically. She believes him too soon and frequently has conflicting explanations for all of her skills. (At one point, she stole an automobile, claiming she hotwired it one minute and the key was in the ignition the next.)

As their adventure proceeds, the doll appears to expand in size. They go to Tommy's brother, Gi, to try to decipher the note. 

They then proceed to Del's place, where we find she is incredibly wealthy yet still works as a waitress. She also reveals a different side of herself when Tommy asks to view her paintings and threatens to shoot him if he does. Tommy is concerned because her dog appears to be extremely intelligent.

Tommy's Corvette is damaged, two automobiles are stolen, and one enormous boat is trashed on their drive to escape the ever-growing doll. 

They arrive at Del's mother's house, which appears strange. They claim to be able to listen to live radio broadcasts from the past using their radio. Del's mother has an unusual sense of timing when she predicts when the rain will end. 

Gi calls and warns Tommy not to bring the blonde with him to their mother. Tommy drags Del along nevertheless, where he discovers the doll was created by a friend of his mother to terrify him back home. They start a rite that, after a few terrifying minutes, utterly extinguishes the creature.

Tommy notices Del's paintings, which are of him. She had been watching him from afar for the past two years because she knew he was her fate.

He and Del marry in Las Vegas. They then return to their hometown.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Deliverance Payne, Edge Of My Seat, Fast Paced, Highly Recommend, Koontz Books, Page Turner, Rag Doll, Really Enjoyed, Screwball Comedy, Tick Tock, Tommy Phan, Years Ago


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Icebound Summary

Dean Koontz, David Axton, Adventure, American, Assassination, Contemporary, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Psychological, Science Fiction, Suspense, Teen, Terrorism, Thriller, Young Adult

Icebound

Published: 1995
Author: Dean Koontz (Written as David Axton)
Genre: Adventure, American, Assassination, Contemporary, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Psychological, Science Fiction, Suspense, Teen, Terrorism, Thriller, Young Adult

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

The narrative revolves around a group of multinational scientists who are working on a project to tow an iceberg to be used as drought relief. 

It is led by Rita and Harold (Harry) Carpenter, a husband and wife partnership. Rita is secretly terrified of the cold, ice, and snow. 

The scientists become stuck on the iceberg due to a sudden storm, with explosives ticking beneath them. 

They will perish if they do not find a way out. A Russian submarine is attempting to save them, but the operation is hampered by ice. Meanwhile, another issue has arisen. One of the team members is a covert assassin with his own purpose.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

David Axton, Edge Of Your Seat, Even Though, Fast Paced, Group Of Scientists, Harry And Rita, Koontz Books, Russian Submarine, Stranded On An Iceberg, Tom Clancy, Well Written


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Hideaway Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Media Tie-In, Psychic, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

Hideaway

Published: 1992
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Media Tie-In, Psychic, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Following a car accident that leaves him clinically dead for more than 80 minutes, Hatch Harrison, a Southern California antique dealer, begins having weird dreams and visions that tie him to a psychotic killer known as "Vassago." 

The murderer thinks he is the human embodiment of one of Hell's demon princes, and that if he murders enough innocent people and sacrifices them to his Master, he will be allowed to return to the hereafter and rule at Satan's right hand. He also has an unusual disease that allows him to see in the dark while simultaneously making his eyes incredibly sensitive to light. 

Meanwhile, the catastrophe offers Hatch and his artist wife Lindsey a new lease on life as they battle to repair their marriage after their son died of cancer five years ago. 

Hatch continues to be plagued by visions, in some cases seeing through Vassago's eyes, while the couple attempts to adopt a small girl called Regina. To make matters worse, Vassago gradually learns about Hatch and his family in the same way, putting both Lindsay and Regina at risk.

Vassago's true identity is revealed to be Jeremy Nyebern; as a teenager, he brutally murdered his mother and sister before attempting suicide. 

Dr. Jonas Nyebern, Jeremy's father, who miraculously resuscitated Hatch, saved his life (thus facilitating the seemingly supernatural bond between the two men). 

Jeremy, like Hatch, was clinically dead for more than 30 minutes and thinks that during that time he went to Hell and was subsequently resurrected to serve Satan's work.

Vassago's visions lead him to abduct Regina and take her to his "hideaway" towards the end of the novel (an abandoned amusement park, where, as a boy, Jeremy committed his first murder). 

Hatch and Vassago fight there, and Hatch beats Vassago to death with a crucifix hooked to a flashlight, saving Regina and Lindsay

Hatch unexpectedly begins speaking in another voice and refers to himself as "Uriel" (whom Hatch subsequently discovers is an archangel described in the Bible), hinting that Vassago's ideas about his demonic origin and brief voyage to the afterlife were not wholly irrational after all. Uriel/Hatch informs Vassago/Jeremy that he will be sent to Hell as a slave rather than a prince.

Following Vassago's defeat, the Harrison family strengthens their ties, with Regina now referring to her adoptive parents as Mom and Dad.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

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Cold Fire Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Contemporary, Fantasy, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Psychic, Psychological, Romantic, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Cold Fire

Published: 1991
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Contemporary, Fantasy, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Psychic, Psychological, Romance, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Jim Ironheart, a recently retired teacher, puts his life in danger to help others. In Portland, he rescues a small kid from an inattentive drunk driver in a van. He saves a toddler from an underground explosion in Boston. He disarms a guy in Houston who was attempting to shoot his own wife – and he isn't just lucky to be in the right location at the right time. He receives "inspiration" and knows he needs to go somewhere quickly. 

To the amazement of people around him, he hurries off to call a cab or board a plane, abandoning whatever he's doing at the time. He has no idea where or why these visions occur, but he feels he must be a God-sent guardian angel with a celestial ability.

Holly Thorne, a reporter, was in Portland to write a dull story on a school teacher who had produced a book of poetry full of poems Holly believes to be pure transcendental rubbish - but such is Holly's lot in life. 

She is a terrific writer, but she is failing as a reporter because she has too much ethics and compassion. As she walks away, she sees Jim rescue the child from the drunk driver and notices something fishy about Jim's statements of how he began rushing for the child before seeing or hearing the vehicle approaching. 

She finds that a mystery good Samaritan called Jim with blue eyes has performed 12 last-minute rescues in different newspapers during the previous three months.

Holly is drawn to Jim and his intense but chilly blue eyes — eyes that burn with a passionate, cold fire, hence the title of the tale.

Holly agrees to accompany this humble yet enigmatic savior on his next "mission." Unbeknownst to Jim, she rushes to the airport and joins a United Airlines DC-10 flight heading for Chicago. 

She goes to face him and discovers Jim's weird yet incredible abilities. Jim informs her that he has been sent by God to save a woman and a kid on the plane - he has no idea why God has selected these two in particular, but he does know that they must swap seats or they will perish in the awful plane accident of which he has seen a vision. 

Holly is impressed by Jim's notion that he possesses some mystical power bestowed upon him by God.

Holly takes a more skeptical approach, arguing how silly such notions are. She wonders why "God" would choose to save these two people while killing 151 other passengers, as Jim predicted. There must be much more deserving individuals on board, and why would God allow the plane to crash at all? Holly encourages Jim to do more than simply inform the couple to relocate, but to notify the pilot and maybe rescue everyone on board. 

Jim first resists, and he is adamant about not questioning his visions. He just informs Holly that God sends him and that he solely follows the instructions - anything else would be going against God's plan. 

Who else, he wonders, could be sending him visions to save lives just in time? Holly talks him down and assures him that there is no reason for Jim (or God) to let someone die in vain. 

The plane, however, is beyond repair and crashes, reducing the number of deaths from 151 to 47.

Holly is able to earn Jim's trust after the tragedy. They are drawn to each other, but Holly is intrigued by Jim's unusual visions. She intends to find out how, why, and who, just as any reporter would. 

However, the more she probes, the stranger things get. Almost all of Jim's childhood memories are gone, save for the fact that his parents died when he was nine at his grandparents' ranch. He just has hazy memories of his youth and becomes irritated when Holly asks him. 

She realizes that his odd skills are related to his childhood and the absence of memory from that time. For numerous nights, she hears him mumble in his sleep, "There is an Enemy. It is on its way. It's going to kill us all. It is unrelenting." 

She and Jim begin to have identical terrifying nightmares surrounding the old mill from his grandparents' ranch, and during one of these "nightmares," they are both fully conscious and fighting some eerie force coming at them from the walls and ceiling – needless to say, they are convinced the force behind it all is neither God nor benign.

Holly certainly thinks they must return to the ranch to locate the cause of everything, despite her terror of what they may discover. Jim is first hesitant, but as they get closer to the ranch, he becomes increasingly persuaded that the entity is something truly big and strong — something not of this world.

Once inside the scary tower chamber of the windmill, the alien emerges from the neighboring pond, first through noises similar to church bells and then through a captivating show of swirling colors and bursting lights. 

The creature then begins to materialize as a voice by magically using a pen and paper to make words appear. It introduces itself as THE FRIEND from ANOTHER WORLD. When asked why, it responds, "TO OBSERVE, STUDY, AND ASSIST MANKIND." 

Holly questions why it assaulted them the night before, to which THE FRIEND responds that it was the work of its opposite half, THE ENEMY. 

When queried about the bells and lights, it responds, "FOR DRAMA?" When Holly starts asking questions as to why certain individuals are selected but not many others, THE FRIEND reveals that someone will solve all deadly diseases, another will become a fine leader, someone else will become an incredible spiritual leader, and on and on. 

While Jim is overjoyed, Holly cannot trust the answers since they do not make logical sense and appear banal, fanciful, and infantile to her. 

While Jim is out of the room, Holly asks THE FRIEND probing questions about him. All of the responses are too predictable to accept, and it ultimately responds to her pestering with threats, and then, most surprisingly, with the words "I," "MY," and "ME." 

At that point, it is determined that Jim is the source of both THE FRIEND and THE ENEMY, that it is he, not God or some foreign entity, who is generating the nightmares. 

After Jim's parents died, he got infatuated with a novel about an extraterrestrial in a pond close to a windmill – so enthralled that the youngster never grew up until one day, an adult-in-body Jim moved away and began a purportedly regular life. 

Holly assists Jim in dealing with his past, and the two embark on a new life together.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Character Development, Great Read, Highly Recommend, Holly Thorne, Jim And Holly, Jim Ironheart, Koontz Books, Koontz Novels, Odd Thomas, Page Turner, Stephen King


Rating: 90/100
Recommended: 100/100 Yes.

Buy the Kindle Version Here

Free With Free Audible Trial

Phantoms (1998) (R)

The Servants Of Twilight (1991) (R)

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Midnight Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Fiction, Genetic Engineering, Horror, Literature, Political, Science Fiction, Spy, Suspense, Thriller

Midnight

Published: 1989
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Fiction, Genetic Engineering, Horror, Literature, Political, Science Fiction, Spy, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Janice Capshaw, a midnight runner, is followed and slain by a gang of enigmatic, horrific animals while running along the beach in her northern California hometown of Moonlight Cove. 

Sam Booker, an undercover FBI agent, arrives in Moonlight Cove to investigate a string of mysterious deaths, including Janice Capshaw's. 

Tessa Jane Lockland, Janice Capshaw's sister, also arrives at Moonlight Cove to investigate her sister's unsolved death.

Chrissie Foster, an eleven-year-old girl who lives on a farm north of town, finds her parents in a physically transformed state - half-human and part beast - and is compelled to leave for her survival. 

She makes her way to town in search of assistance. The unknown animals are hunting Sam, Tessa, and Chrissie separately. 

Sam and Tessa happen to meet at a Laundromat, where they had both sought refuge after being followed by the animals. They are first distrustful of one another, but they learn that in order to survive, they must work together.

Sam learns that Thomas Shaddack, a great computer scientist, is transforming the people of Moonlight Cove into something unknown. Sam also discovers that the local police are assisting Shaddack with the conversions and that their cutting-edge computer system, provided by Shaddack's business, is overly sophisticated for the demands of a small-town police department. 

Because of a letter written to the FBI by Moonlight Cove resident Harry Talbot providing information on recent distressing happenings, Sam and Tessa decide to visit Harry at his home. 

Harry is a Vietnam veteran who was severely injured during the conflict and now uses a wheelchair. He is not yet 'converted.' Harry has learned a lot about what is going on since he spends much of his time monitoring the residents of Moonlight Cove via his telescope, and he also discovers that the local police are participating. 

Chrissie also ends herself at Harry Talbot's when her effort to visit the local church results in her having to dodge the animals once more, and she makes the rational decision that Harry could be a safe person to approach.

Together, the four characters are able to put together a more complete picture of what is going on at Moonlight Cove. 

Thomas Shaddack has developed a method for transforming a person into a super-human who is immune to disease, injury, exhaustion, or emotion. However, the conversion has an unintended consequence. Life becomes intolerably pointless without the ability to experience human emotions, and the majority of newly converted villagers revert irreversibly into a beast condition, concerned solely with hunting, murdering, and digesting their victims. 

Shaddack's mental state worsens as events unfold. He refuses to admit that his ideas have failed miserably and that the conversions should be halted. 

When the Chief of Police, Loman Watkins, realizes that nothing can stop the town's spiral into mayhem, he pledges to murder Shaddack, which will instantaneously kill every converted person in the village. 

Shaddack has implanted a microchip in each individual as part of the 'conversions,' which will murder them along with Shaddack if his heart stops beating.

The climactic fight occurs in the local high school when Sam goes there to use a school computer terminal to send a warning to the outside world and solicit help. 

Shaddack is slain in the confrontation, which also kills the majority of the inhabitants. The FBI arrives to clean up the wreckage after Sam, Tessa, and Chrissie survive.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

FBI Agent, Island Of Dr Moreau, Koontz Books, Love Dean, Moonlight Cove, Page Turner, Sam Booker, Small Town, Stephen King, Strange Things, Vietnam Vet, Years Ago


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Watchers Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Animals, Fiction, Genetic Engineering, Ghost, Hard Science, Horror, Literature, Science Fiction, Suspense, Thriller

Watchers

Published: February 1987
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Animals, Fiction, Genetic Engineering, Ghost, Hard Science, Horror, Literature, Science Fiction, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Travis Cornell, a former Delta Force operative, is exploring a canyon near his house when he comes across two genetically produced animals that have escaped from a top-secret government facility. 

Travis is befriended by one, a Golden Retriever with heightened intellect, while the other, an entity known as the Outsider, appears to be attempting to murder the dog. 

Travis brings the puppy home after avoiding the Outsider. When he discovers the dog's extraordinary intelligence, he calls him Einstein.

Later, he and Einstein discover and rescue Nora Devon in a park from a violent guy named Arthur Streck

They create a trio when they come together. Travis, Nora, and Einstein are soon on the run not only from the Outsider but also from federal agents determined to find the laboratory escapees and Vince Nasco, a ruthless professional assassin hired by the Soviets to kill several human targets carrying the knowledge of how to stop the Outsider, in order to further the Outsider's destruction. 

He wants the dog to trade for a large quantity of money on his own, without the knowledge of the Soviets or anyone.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Best Book, Dog Lovers, Edge Of Your Seat, Ever Read, Highly Recommend, Koontz At His Best, Koontz Books, Must Read, Page Turner, Stephen King, Travis And Nora


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Strangers Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Conspiracy, Depression, Fiction, First Contact, Horror, Literary, Mental Health, Psychological, Science Fiction, Superhero, Suspense, Teen, Thriller, Young Adult

Strangers

Published: 1986
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Conspiracy, Depression, Fiction, First Contact, Horror, Literary, Mental Health, Psychological, Science Fiction, Superhero, Suspense, Teen, Thriller, Young Adult

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

A group of people is pulled together by their various and equally bizarre illnesses. Dominick has somnambulism, Ginger has unexplained lapses into a fugue state, Father Brendan loses his faith and then has a supernatural 'gift,' and Ernie has nyctophobia.

Dominick receives Polaroids that lead him to the Tranquility Motel, which is located thirty miles west of Elko in the Nevada 'high desert.' 

They realize, along with Ned and Sandy, who owns the restaurant next door to the motel, that their genuine memories from the previous summer may have been buried. 

Ginger, Jorja, and the other guests at the Tranquility Motel are later contacted and offered to join the organization. 

Ginger reveals that Azrael Blocks, a form of brainwashing generated by medications and hypnosis, inhibit their memories. She underwent hypnosis as a treatment to determine the origin of her illness.

The 'community' of Tranquility is unaware that those behind the repression are observing them. 

Jack Twist has joined them (who was led to the Tranquility Motel by a series of postcards placed there by an insider). 

Finally, the gang devises a plan to discover the government secret concealed in the hills at the Thunder Hill Depository.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Character Development, Edge Of Your Seat, Ever Read, Hard To Put, Highly Recommend, Koontz Books, Main Characters, Page Turner, Tranquility Motel


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Twilight Eyes Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Crime, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Psychic, Shape Shifter, Supernatural, Thriller

Twilight Eyes

Published: 1987
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Crime, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Psychic, Shape Shifter, Supernatural, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Slim starts the novel by sneaking up on and murdering a "goblin or beast" on the fairgrounds of a local carnival. 

Goblins are genetically created super-predators that want murder and human agony and can shapeshift between human and bestial forms. They were created in an ancient, technologically advanced age of human civilization to torture and eventually slaughter humanity. 

Slim, Rya Raines (his wife), and Joel Tuck (Slim's friend and fellow carnie) are the only ones who can see them. These goblins are superhuman, exceedingly violent and genocidal, and can imitate human behavior. 

While they seem and act normally, they only experience unpleasant emotions such as dread and hatred. Their entire enjoyment comes from tormenting and murdering humanity.

Slim's claim to fame is his "Twilight Eyes," which allows him to get psychic, or prophetic, foretellings of the future. They also allow him to see past the goblins' human-like disguises. These eyes are so-called because they are purple, like the skyline at sunset.

Slim then goes on to join a circus (one of many he has strayed from) to sustain himself while killing goblins and escaping from his homicidal background (in which he killed an uncle by marriage that was a goblin responsible for the deaths of several family members). 

One of the "carnies'" important members is a young lady named Rya Raines, who swiftly becomes his girlfriend and confidante. As their relationship develops, Slim has numerous more run-ins with the goblins, revealing that his buddy Joel, and even Rya herself, can see the goblins and that each of them has suffered much as a result of the goblins' activities in the past. 

Rya had long established a deal with the goblins to report to them anytime she met someone who could see through their disguise in exchange for protection from their predations. He refuses to make the same agreement with them as she does.

This reality causes a schism between her and Slim, resulting in carnage. She subsequently comes to regret this, and after reconciling with Slim, she marries him. They decide to go on a quest to exterminate any and all species they may find.

They go on a personal mission to conduct a secret battle against the monsters in Yontsdown, Pennsylvania, the apparent hub of their harsh and violent form of society. They would learn and confront the final, terrible intentions the goblins had for the planet and all of humanity.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Ability To See, Highly Recommend, Joel Tuck, Koontz At His Best, Koontz Books, Second Half, Slim Mackenzie, Stephen King, Years Ago, Young Man


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Darkfall Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Horror, Suspense, Ghost, Crime, Thriller, Contemporary, Literature, Fiction

Darkfall

Published: February 1984 (UK) - October 1984 (US)
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Horror, Suspense, Ghost, Crime, Thriller, Contemporary, Literature, Fiction

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Jack Dawson, a New York City detective, is coping with a number of issues in his personal life. His wife Linda died lately, leaving him to care for his two children, Penny and Davey. He is also forced to confront an exceptionally cruel spate of Mafia criminals' killings, which appear to have been carried out by animals, despite the fact that no live creature would just shred a person to pieces without consuming anything. Finally, his partner Rebecca rejected his final conclusion that supernatural or magical forces were involved in the crimes.

In reality, these beasts were summoned from hell by a bocor named Baba Lavelle. Lavelle thought they were lesser demons due to their diminutive size since the doorway to Hell is not yet large enough to allow larger monsters. 

Dawson is astonished at the end of the story to discover that the gateway has grown so large that it has consumed the shed where it is hidden. Tentacles have emerged from the hole and are dragging Lavelle to hell. 

When Jack notices this, he concludes that it was only a foreshadowing of a bigger evil to come. 

When holy water fails to stop the pit from expanding, Jack uses his blood from a tentacle wound to do it. He is afraid that if he fails, he will have to sacrifice himself in the hole. 

The tale concludes with all of the inhabitants turning to mud and Jack hearing Rebecca exclaim "I love you, Jack" in thin air.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Character Development, Edge Of Your Seat, Fast Paced, Good Read, Great Read, Jack Dawson, Koontz Books, Main Characters, New York, Rebecca Chandler, York City


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Phantoms Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Contemporary, Crime, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Rural, Science Fiction, Small Town, Suspense, Thriller

Phantoms

Published: March 1983
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Contemporary, Crime, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Rural, Science Fiction, Small Town, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Jenny and Lisa Paige, two sisters, return to Jenny's homeland of Snowfield, California, a tiny ski resort community hidden in the Sierra Nevada Mountains where Jenny works as a doctor, only to discover that no one is alive. 

The few bodies they discover have been mangled or reflect some unusual way of death. Jenny eventually calls authorities from a neighboring town for assistance after becoming increasingly concerned about the community's unusual and scary predicament.

The girls and the authorities, commanded by Sheriff Bryce Hammond, might request assistance from the military Biological Investigations Unit. 

Only one clue as to what was causing the town's disappearances and fatalities was discovered by the police. 

A victim of whatever was attempting to murder him managed to write Timothy Flyte's name on a mirror just before he was slain. Flyte is a British professor who wrote The Ancient Enemy. His book records and describes the mass disappearances of individuals throughout history in various places of the world.

It is revealed that the settlement was constructed over the hibernation grounds of one such Enemy, an amoeboid shapeshifter. This Ancient Enemy feeds seldom, but when it does, the consequences are disastrous. 

The Enemy was said to have caused or facilitated the extinction of the dinosaurs, as well as many of the big enigmatic mass vanishings: Mayan civilization, Roanoke, ghost ships, and so on.

The monster absorbs other living forms to gain bulk and can perfectly imitate other animals. It can develop microscopic "probes" or "phantoms" that imitate eaten living forms and follow the commands of its "hive mind" to go out and hunt new victims; also, the monster absorbs the mental capacity of those it eats.

The nucleus, which is positioned in the core of its main body, is its single living organ. The cells of the monster have a chemical structure comparable to that of fossil fuels; when this is discovered, the scientists utilize oil-eating bacteria to destroy the Enemy's core or brain. Ananda Mohan Chakrabarty created the genetically modified bacteria in real life.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Ancient Enemy, Ben Affleck, Bob Weinstein, Edge Of Your Seat, Ever Read, Harvey Weinstein, Highly Recommend, Jenny And Lisa, Joanna Going, Joe Chappelle, Koontz Books, Liev Schreiber, Mass Disappearances, Miramax, Page Turner, Peter O'Toole, Rose McGowan, Years Ago


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The Mask Summary

The Mask

Published: 1981
Author: Dean Koontz (Written as Owen West)
Genre: American, Family Life, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Romance, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

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Summary

On a busy day, an amnesic blonde girl arrives in the midst of traffic. Carol and Paul, a married couple, are drawn to her and take her in, picturing her as the kid they never had.

Carol then begins to experience dreams involving terrible noises in the middle of the night, a bloodied visage in a mirror, and a razor-sharp ax.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Best Work, Character Development, Ever Read, Favorite Authors, Feel Like, Good Book, Great Read, Koontz Books, Loose Ends, Love Dean, Supernatural Elements


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Whispers Summary

Dean Koontz, Adult, American, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Parenting, psychological, Serial Killer, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Whispers

Published: April 1980
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: Adult, American, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Parenting, psychological, Serial Killer, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

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Summary

Hilary Thomas, a Los Angeles screenwriter, is attacked in her house by Bruno Frye, a mentally ill man whose Napa Valley winery she previously visited. 

Frye attempts to rape her, but she holds him at gunpoint and calls the cops. Detective Tony Clemenza assures her that Frye has a solid alibi because the cops contacted his house and he replied, demonstrating that he was nowhere near Los Angeles that night.

Frye comes the next day and assaults Hilary again, this time getting numerous knife wounds before fleeing. She contacts the police and meets with Clemenza again, who informs her that Frye's corpse has been discovered and brings her to the morgue to identify it.

Hilary is assaulted once more by a man who looks to be Frye. "Frye" flees just as Clemenza arrives, and Hilary informs him of what transpired. 

Frye's psychologist allows them to listen to a cassette recording of one of Frye's sessions after considerable research. Frye mentions identical twins being born with cauls on their faces and claims to have read somewhere that this was a demon's mark.

Frye has been murdering women he believes are possessed by the soul of his deceased mother, who mistreated him and threatened to return from the grave. He believes Hilary is his mother's most recent "host."

Hilary and Tony visit a retired madam who tells them that Leo, Frye's grandpa, took his daughter Katherine to be cared for when she became pregnant with him. 

Katherine gave birth to identical twin sons not long after Leo died. The twins were born with cauls on their faces, causing Katherine, who was mentally ill, to assume they were devils. She reared her sons as though they were one and the same person. They were both called Bruno, and they were both praised or punished for whatever they did.

Finally, Hilary and Clemenza return to Frye's house, where he assaults them again before being murdered in a fight with Clemenza.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Bruno Frye, Don Carmody, Douglas Jackson, Edge Of My Seat, Even Though, Ever Read, Filmrise, Great Book, Hilary Thomas, Jean Leclerc, John Dunning, Koontz Books, Main Characters, Second Time, Victoria Tennant, Well Written, Years Ago


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The Funhouse Summary

Dean Koontz, Owen West, American, Contemporary, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Psychological, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

The Funhouse

Published: 1980
Author: Dean Koontz (written as Owen West)
Genre: American, Contemporary, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Psychological, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

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Summary

Ellen, a young woman fed up with being dominated by her meek father and psychotically pious mother, falls in love with Conrad, a traveling carnival barker, in 1955. 

Despite her mother's protests, she joins the carnival and marries him. However, it rapidly becomes evident that Conrad is using Ellen to conceive the Antichrist, as she discovers he worships Satan

She finally gives birth to a horribly disfigured baby while stuck at the fair since she cannot return to her parents.

The demonic baby assaults Ellen one stormy night. She smashes it just as Conrad returns home. Enraged, he beats but does not kill her, threatening to track her down and murder her own children one day. Ellen bolts into the darkness.

Amy becomes pregnant by her boyfriend in 1980. He refuses to raise or pay for the child's abortion. She hurries home, crying, to her pious, alcoholic mother, who is subsequently revealed to be Ellen

Amy ultimately informs her mother she is pregnant, prompting her mother to hit her. She does, however, agree to pay for an abortion and accompany Amy to the doctor, but only to prevent Amy from "giving birth to the Antichrist."

Meanwhile, Amy's younger brother, Joey, is privately terrified of Ellen since she regularly enters his room late at night, drunkenly raving about how he may be a demon in disguise. He chooses to flee with a traveling fair that will be in town the following week.

Conrad's circus is discovered to be his. The other carnies try to convince the barker that he would never locate Ellen after years of looking, but he refuses to give up. 

That night, a young couple is enticed to the carnival's funhouse, where they are disemboweled and half-devoured by Gunther, Conrad's demonic, monstrous kid from his affair with Madame Zena, the carnival's fortune teller. Conrad intends to murder Ellen's children with the help of Gunther.

Amy goes to Liz's Diner, where her promiscuous best friend works. Liz declares her intention to flee to Las Vegas and work as a call lady. She invites Amy to join her the morning after they return from the carnival. 

During the day, Joey enters the fair and Conrad recognizes him as Ellen's child. Joey is terrified and lies when asked what his mother's name is. Conrad is upset, but he accepts his fate.

Conrad discovers Amy and Joey are Ellen's children after doing background checks on the town's people with the help of a private investigator. 

Madame Zena is terrified when he explains his intention to lure them to the funhouse and murder them. He strangles her to death when she refuses to aid him with his plot. 

Amy, Liz, and their dates, Buzz and Ritchie, visit the carnival that night. Joey flees home and goes to the carnival with the intention of escaping with it. 

He tracks down Conrad and expresses his attraction to him. Before tying him up, the barker brings him to the funhouse and admits that he knows he lied about his mother.

The party arrives and boards at the funhouse. Conrad cuts the power midway through the journey, leaving the four teenagers stranded. 

Gunther drags Richie away through a trap door before severing his head. The three others look for a way out. 

Amy equips herself with a knife she found in a showcase. Liz continues alone inside the funhouse before being discovered by Gunther and dismembered in the basement. Conrad comes and shoots Buzz to death with a handgun. He has Joey with him, who is restrained by a rope leash. Amy manages to conceal the knife. She dupes Conrad into thinking she's going to console Joey before stabbing him in the throat and stealing his revolver.

Amy and Joey discover the cellar and descend, where Gunther attacks. Amy shoots him, and he falls into the funhouse's machines and is ripped apart. Amy drags Joey out of the funhouse and into the early light once they discover the exit.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

AMC Plus Horror, Amy And Joey, Character Development, Derek Power, Derek Powers, Edge Of Your Seat, Funhouse Loose Ends, Good Read, Jack McDermott, Koontz Books, Largo Woodruff, Long Time, Miles Chapin, Odd Thomas, Owen West, Shawn Carson, Stephen King, Steven Bernhardt, Tobe Hooper, Years Later


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The Vision Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Murder, Psychic, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

The Vision

Published: 1977
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Murder, Psychic, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Mary Bergen develops clairvoyant skills after being raped and maimed as a kid by her family's gardener, Berton Mitchell

She assists the police in their murder investigations with the support of her older brother Alan and spouse. Unfortunately, she can only detect fragments of a crime as they occur in real-time.

Mary prevents a serial murderer from taking another victim a few days before Christmas. Following the trauma, Alan, who has always been envious of Max for entering his sister's life and taking over his job as her caretaker, attempts to persuade her to divorce him once more. She flatly refuses. He agrees with her decision and departs for a holiday.

Mary and Max return to their mansion for the holidays. She does, however, have a vivid vision of four women being murdered in the future. This has never happened before, as she could only experience visions in real-time before. Max attempts to convince her that it was all a dream, but she is skeptical. The following morning, a news program is shown revealing the murder of four ladies who shared a home by a single perpetrator. Mary believes she knows one of the victims.

Mary has her weekly appointment with her psychiatrist, who is attempting to help her overcome the horrible childhood incident by reliving it. She recalls pounding wings and a terrible voice talking to her. 

However, before she can recall Mitchell's face, many glass figurines in the office begin pelting the two. The ruckus dies down after a few minutes. 

That night, Mary sees the same assailant murdering three people at a hair shop. Max's pistol animates and begins shooting at them as she tries to visualize the killer's face. The pair becomes persuaded that they are being tormented by a poltergeist who is attempting to obstruct Mary's visions. 

The next morning, another news broadcast confirms the triple homicide occurred. In a panic, she phones Alan, who calms her down.

Soon after, Mary has another vision in which the killer climbs a tower in King's Point and snipes locals during a Christmas Eve boat procession. 

Percy Osterman, her, and Max head there to halt the attack with the approval of a police chief she knows. Mary's old friend and journalist Lou Pasternak lives in King's Point, where they stay. 

The three attempt to identify the assailant. Berton Mitchell is mentioned, although Mary is aware that he committed suicide in his jail cell long before the trial, always professing innocence. They request that Osterman look into Mitchell's wife and son, whom they believe are still alive.

The next day, Mary attempts to recall the killer's face. However, a swarm of seagulls assault her and Max and refuse to go until she gives up. They then go to the King's Point police station, where they manage to persuade the town's dubious sheriff, John Patmore, to put cops in every tower. 

However, no attack occurs that night, much to Patmore's chagrin. Following that, Mary has another vision of a lady she believes she recognizes being murdered by the killer while eating dinner at Lou's.

The three receive two pieces of unpleasant news the next day. The familiar lady Mary saw in her vision is discovered dead, and Osterman phones to inform her that Mitchell's wife and son perished decades ago in an arson assault on their trailer. 

She convinces Lou and Max to drive her to a closed entertainment center with a tower that night, convinced that the sniper shootings will take place. Mary and Max break inside the center, while Lou stands guard in the automobile.

Mary is plagued by visions of fluttering wings and flashbacks of her childhood abuse. Max is at the bottom of the steps, while she is at the top of the tower.

The murderer arrives and stabs Lou to death before entering and attacking and injuring Max. He manages to remain still while the killer, later revealed to be Alan, climbs the stairs and confronts his sister.

Mary recalls her assault and understands it was Alan, not Berton Mitchell, who assaulted her. He tied her to the floor of Mitchell's cottage before biting, slashing, and stuffing a live bat up her vagina, which is where her memory of flapping wings came from. 

Her brother managed to implant false memories and a psychic grip on the occurrence while she was in a coma at the hospital by warning her of all the dreadful things he would do to her if she ever talked of what truly happened. 

All of the "poltergeist" episodes were caused by Mary's own powers acting against her as a result of the hold. 

Alan also admits to murdering Mitchell's wife and children, and that all of the victims Mary recognized were prior girlfriends of his.

Max tries to escape the center while bleeding heavily, attracting the notice of incoming officers and Patmore, who misidentifies him as the killer and shoots him in the shoulder. 

Mary, now that she knows the truth, utilizes her psychic abilities to cause the bats that reside in the tower to attack Alan. He trips and falls down the steps, breaking his neck. 

A few weeks later, she attends Lou's burial and pays a visit to Max, who is recovering in the hospital. She cheerfully admits that she is no longer terrified of the dark.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Bad Guy, Edge Of Your Seat, Even Though, Good Read, Koontz At His Best, Koontz Books, Koontz Earlier, Love Dean, Mary Bergen, Serial Killer, Twists And Turns


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