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Odd Hours by Dean Koontz
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Odd Hours (original 2008; edition 2009)

by Dean Koontz

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1,976573,110 (3.77)61
Member:Skooshie
Title:Odd Hours
Authors:Dean Koontz
Info:Bantam (2009), Edition: Reprint, Mass Market Paperback, 416 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:****
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Odd Hours by Dean Koontz (2008)

(8) 2008 (13) 2009 (9) animals (10) audiobook (18) California (7) dean koontz (50) ebook (22) fantasy (26) fiction (137) Frank Sinatra (6) ghosts (40) hardcover (9) horror (64) imaginative fiction (10) juvenile (10) mystery (46) novel (9) Odd Thomas (76) Odd Thomas Series (8) paranormal (30) read (21) science fiction (7) series (23) supernatural (35) suspense (51) thriller (49) to-read (19) unread (10) wishlist (7)

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Showing 1-5 of 57 (next | show all)
Odd Thomas is truly an odd character. He travels around with his ghostly friends Elvis, Frank Sinatra and a dog named Boo. I can't wait to read his next adventure! I highly recommend this series and I hope that the TV series or movie version will do these books justice. ( )
  sweetchuckie | May 14, 2013 |
I really like the 'Odd' series. This time Odd is battling home-grown terrorists with the aid of Frank Sinatra. Fast-paced and easy to read this book is another excellent read from Mr. Koonz. ( )
  Heptonj | May 6, 2013 |
I was pretty disappointed with this book. I still laughed a handful, and still think Koontz has come a long way from those books in the 90s that I read several of, but, I definitely did not feel so strongly about this one. I love Odd, his humor and wit, and the light supernatural elements; the first two books in the series I simply could not put down, and the third, while a little different, was still pretty awesome. But this one ...Koontz just took it too far over the top, plus, his repeating stuff from the previous ones so absurdly much is starting to get really grating. It's a series, and technically they can stand alone but they really lose a lot that way. Just deal with it, most people who read them will be "devoted" readers and we DO NOT WANT TO REREAD THE SAME THING OVER & OVER, damn you! It's just a waste of space and it completely rips me out of the book when I'm faced with NOOO NOT AGAAAAIINNNNNN! *groan* Completely kills the mood.

And really, I think he was doing a pretty nice job keeping the supernatural aspect fairly low; there are bad guys, there are ghosts, Odd does good things, things are good. This one... too much. Just too much! It's no longer even the least bit believable at this point (whether you believe in ghosts or not, things were pretty balanced previously, nothing utterly outrageous), we have slipped entirely into the fantasy realm, and even Odd is continually going "I'm seeing all sorts of things that bend the rules I've always known" or whatever. Why change the game four books in?! No. And not just all this new unexplainable junk, but (spoiler for previous book) we've lost Elvis, and now there's none of the normal ghosts & bodachs that the whole Odd line is built on.

I'll still keep reading, but only from the library; I'd be reluctant to pay for book 5 or 6 without knowing first if 5 continues like this one—which it almost certainly does because this one left on a huge cliffhanger. Unfortunately Odd has lost quite a bit of favor with me now after everything went topsy-turvy here. ( )
  PolymathicMonkey | Apr 30, 2013 |
When it comes to Dean Koontz books I can generally take 'em or leave 'em. Which is to say that while I'm not a major fan neither do I dislike him as a writer. This book is one I probably should have left.

It's well written, the prose is nice, the description of places and things serves very well towards providing the reader with a mental image of what's being seen... but not the bigger picture of what's going on. It's very enigmatic. Full of mysterious things that often don't quite add up and seems, more often than not, incomplete. I've never read any of the other books in the Odd Thomas series so I have no way of knowing what the others are like but this reminded me of the middle movie in a film trilogy that has no real beginning or end and is just a place to split what would be an otherwise oppressively long film.

The action starts almost immediately, although the reader is left with a sense of 'What in the world is going on?' because there doesn't seem to be any rhyme or reason to much of it. From there the mystery deepens and deepens and deepens and then... it just kind of dissolves into nothing. There is no real explanation of the more intriguing things that are happening other than one character's repeated use of the phrase "All things in their time." Long story short, "their time" is not in this book.

I kept with it because I was curious as to where it was all going but then it went nowhere special and I wished I would have just stopped in the first few chapters. Unless you've read the other books in the series I wouldn't recommend this one, it doesn't do well as a stand alone story. ( )
  Mike-L | Apr 8, 2013 |
While the core of the character of Odd Thomas has remained intact and is actually developing, Dean Koontz has violated tbe premise of the Odd “Biblioverse:” Aside from Sinatra, there are no apparitions of the departed to highlight the story; because the scene of potential suffering is not immediate, there are no bodachs and; Odd actually arms himself voluntarily before heading into a potentially dangerous situation. The story itself has a number of unexplained phenomena (increasingly heavy triggers, the sewer lights and shuffling, the pregnant girl…) and clearly the whole of it is a set-up for the next Odd Thomas novel. On the whole, Odd Hours is not a particularly satisfying storyline. There are a few production issues that mar this audiobook as well: The music tags are garish and intrusive, the pacing of the narration is uneven (and given more to rushing) and, DAB mispronounces “sonar” (SAHN-ar (should be SOHN-ar)) and “voltage” (VAHLT-ij (should be VOHLT-ij).) ( )
  Tanya-dogearedcopy | Apr 4, 2013 |
Showing 1-5 of 57 (next | show all)
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Dedication
This fourth Odd adventure is dedicated to Bruce, Carolyn and Michael Rouleau. To Michael because he made his parents proud. To Carolyn because she makes Bruce happy. To Bruce because he has been so reliable all these years, and because he truly knows what it means to love a good dog.

First words
IT'S ONLY LIFE. WE ALL GET THROUGH IT.
Quotations
The man-made world...is a perverse realm of ego and envy, where power-mad cynics make flase idols of themselves and where the meek have no inheritance because they have gladly surrendered it to their idols in return not for lasting glory but for an occasional parade, not for bread but for the promise of bread.
If evil geniuses are so rare, why do so many bad people get away with so many crimes against their fellow citizens and, when they become leaders of nations, against humanity?
Edmund Burke provided the answer in 1795: The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.
I would only add this: It is also essential that good men and women not be educated and propagandized into believing that real evil is a myth and that all malevolent behavior is merely the result of a broken family's or a failed society's shortcomings, amenable to cure by counseling and by the application of new economic theory.
To do something, to do what you feel sure is right and in the aid of justice, you sometimes have to do things that, when recalled on lonely nights, make you wonder if in fact you are the good man that you like to believe you are.
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Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0553807056, Hardcover)

Amazon Exclusive Essay: Destiny and Odd Hours Odd Thomas came to me as a gift, the entire first chapter of his first book having poured out of me as I was in the middle of writing The Face. I wrote it by hand, though I never work that way, and I never hesitated to think what should come next. He was fully-realized in my mind from the moment I began to write in that lined legal tablet. With other stories and characters, I can identify the source of the inspiration, but not with Oddie and his books. He just suddenly was. When I write about him, his narrative voice is so clear to me that I almost hear him in my head. For those among you who long have thought that I should be institutionalized, just relax: I said I almost hear him. Many times over the years, I said I would never write an open-ended series. Then along came Oddie, and he proved me wrong. Or so I thought. As I wrote the first chapter of Odd Hours, the fourth featuring my fry-cook hero, I realized that this was not an open-ended series, after all, but that it would conclude with six or seven novels. I now think seven. I suddenly saw the end point of his journey, the arc of it to the final book, and I was stunned. Beginning with this fourth story, the stakes were being raised dramatically; Oddie was going to face far more physical and moral danger than previously; and he was going to mature toward the fulfillment of a destiny that I had not seen coming until that moment. Initially, I tried to argue myself out of the direction that Odd Hours was taking. I didn't believe that the first three books had put down a sufficient foundation to support the formidable architecture that I saw rising from it in the next three or four novels. When I began to reread the first three books, however, I quickly discovered that I had unconsciously paved the road that the series was now taking. I had thought I was writing a series with an overall theme about the power and beauty of humility. Indeed I was, but it was also something more than that; and Oddie's ultimate destiny will not be merely purification to a state of absolute humility, but will be that and something else I find quite wonderful. What lies ahead will be a challenge to write--or perhaps not. The character of Odd Thomas was a gift to me, and now I see that the entire architecture of a seven-book series was another gift that came to me complete on the same day Oddie arrived, although I needed time to recognize it. This world is a place of wonder, and life is a mysterious enterprise; but nothing in all my years has been more mysterious than Odd Thomas's origins and my compulsion to write about him. -- Dean Koontz

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 13:50:59 -0500)

(see all 4 descriptions)

Haunted by dreams of a powerful red tide, Odd Thomas, accompanied by two otherworldly sidekicks--his dog Boo and the Chairman of the Board--is drawn to a small California coastal town, where nothing is at it appears and where he confronts overwhelming and sinister forces out to stop his quest.… (more)

(summary from another edition)

» see all 5 descriptions

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