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The Darkest Evening of the Year by Dean Koontz
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The Darkest Evening of the Year

by Dean Koontz

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I liked almost everything about this book except for the ending. To me, it just feels like the 'big finale' was rushed. It left me disappointed. I think 50 more pages added throughout the book would have made it much better. ( )
  RavenWuzHere | Dec 30, 2009 |
Set mostly in Southern California, this topnotch thriller from bestselling author Koontz depicts the magical powers of golden retrievers -- in particular, a female named Nickie, who will stop at nothing to save innocent children and protect their guardians. Amy Redwing, the survivor of a horrifying marriage, establishes Golden Heart to rescue golden retrievers, rehabilitate the abused ones, and find them forever homes.

A supernatural chain of events ensues after Amy and her architect boyfriend, Brian McCarthy, rescue Nickie during a violent intervention and family dispute. Soon the pair are on a mission that leads to a transformative confrontation with a number of ugly characters: Gunther Schloss, a frustrated aspiring novelist turned killer-for-hire; Moonglow, a psycho in the Mommie Dearest league; and Moonglow's lover, Harrow, a self-obsessed sicko. This is the perfect book for thriller addicts who know the darkest hour is just before dawn and for canine lovers who remember that Dog spelled backwards is God.

Review written by Anne Marie Basile, 11/11/2009
  OgdenReads | Dec 29, 2009 |
This is a good thriller that keeps the reader on the edge of his seat. Koontz also has a delightful way with words, sometimes used in an unexpected way. He's also not afraid to use a big word when it's the right one, yet doesn't become obnoxious by showing off his vocabulary. His characters are real, and, though I don't feel I got to understand the antagonists as well as the protagonists, they did not come across as hollow. The plot is a bit mystical and might stretch some reader's credulity, but within the context of the story it works very well. ( )
  Airycat | Nov 30, 2009 |
2008 ( )
  katiemertz | Nov 21, 2009 |
The Darkest Evening of the Year is a supernatural/psychological thriller released under Dean Koontz. I say it's a supernatural thriller as it posseses some strong paranormal, unusual aspects. Such as Nickie, the 'special' golden retriever featured heavily throughout the book. This, being the first ever Dean Koontz novel I have read, I really like it. At first, after reading the first two-hundred pages (in two and a half hours :O), I thought 'Wow! This guy is such a bad-ass writer, I should read more" to the point where thought he may even be better than that of Stephen King. But in some sections he lacked a little, but it was still highly satisfactory.
Just by reading the first chapter of this book, I knew Dean Koontz knew dogs, ever movement of the dogs featured in this book was described acutely accurately, in provokative detail just made me want to read more. I was literally glued to this book, metaphorically speaking of course (How to contradict yourself in one sentence eh).

As usual, I must cut this review short, despite how much I would like to finish it I cannot for yet another arrangement has interfered with reading time :@. I loved this book btw :) (Y) ( )
  JordanLangston | Nov 20, 2009 |
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Epigraph
The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
--Robert Frost, Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening
Dedication
To Gerda, who will one day be greeted jubilantly in the next life by the golden daughter whom she loved so well and with such selfless tenderness in this world. And to Father Jerome Molokie, for his many kindnesses, for his good cheer, for his friendship, and for his inspiring devotion to what is first, true, and infinite.
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Behind the wheel of the Ford Expedition, Amy Redwing drove as if she were immortal and therefore safe at any speed.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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The Darkest Evening of the Year

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0553804820, Hardcover)

Amazon.com Exclusive: The Darkest Ice Cream of the Year by Dean Koontz I once said writing a novel is sometimes like making love and sometimes like having a tooth pulled--and sometimes like making love while having a tooth pulled. I arrived at one of those joyful yet excruciating moments while working on The Darkest Evening of the Year. Because I am obsessive about the revision of each page--the word fussbudget is embarrassingly apt when I am brooding over whether to use a comma or a semicolon--I have more than once held on to a manuscript until the drop-dead date for delivery. When that date rolled around for this book, I had written everything, but I was unwilling to send all of it to my editor. I withheld the last fifty pages for another four days, causing a quiet panic in those at my publishing house who are responsible for meeting production deadlines. Although the book was done, I felt that something was wrong with Chapter 63. The action worked, the characters were in character, the mood was sustained...but something felt wrong with it, some fine point of the villain's motivation. Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, I worked 12-hour days, trying to identify the source of my doubt, but couldn't specify it to my satisfaction. Nothing like this had ever happened to me. Previously, my worst struggles with a story had come in the first two-thirds, and the final third had been, if not a sweet swift toboggan run, at least a sleigh ride. Sunday, I got up at 6:00 and set to work, revising, looking for the thorn I could feel but couldn't see--and ended up working 22 hours, eating at my desk, before tumbling to the problem at 4:00 a.m. Monday morning. "Eureka!" I cried, but I was so weary and my voice was so weak that my shout of jubilation came out as a squeak. The revisions required to Chapter 63 were minor, but after working 58 hours in four days, after having passed a night without sleep, I was unable to focus sharply enough to get them done in the little time that remained before the production schedule would be derailed. In desperation, I turned to that source of creative energy and literary enlightenment that is without equal: ice cream. I shuffled to the kitchen and snared a Dreyer's Slow-Churned Vanilla Almond Crunch bar from the freezer. I devoured this sweet-and-creamy muse, and felt the scales lift from my eyes; inspiration sparkled between my ears. I finished the revisions and e-mailed the final version of Chapter 63 to my editor with not a minute to spare. Although the American Heart Association will take issue with me, my advice to young writers stuck on a scene is to stop worrying about your arteries and give your wheel-spinning imagination what it needs to find traction: a tasty shot of fat and sugar. --Dean Koontz, October 2007

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:05 -0400)

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