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William Katz

Author of Surprise Party

38+ Works 359 Members 7 Reviews

About the Author

Also includes: W Katz (1)

Disambiguation Notice:

Please note that William A. Katz, and William Loren Katz are separate authors with individual author pages. They should not be combined.  

Works by William Katz

Surprise Party (1984) 74 copies, 1 review
Open House (1985) 53 copies, 2 reviews
Facemaker (1988) 33 copies
Visions of Terror (1981) 30 copies, 1 review
Death Dreams (1979) 28 copies
Double Wedding (1990) 26 copies, 1 review
Cy Twombly: Photographs (1993) 16 copies
North Star Crusade (1976) 14 copies
After Dark (1988) 12 copies, 1 review
Ghostflight (1980) 9 copies, 1 review
Violation de domicile (1991) 3 copies

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1940
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Disambiguation notice
Please note that William A. Katz, and William Loren Katz are separate authors with individual author pages. They should not be combined.  

Members

Reviews

7 reviews
An entertaining mystery, maybe a little too ‘well made’. Some nice touches, the lead detective is realistic, in fact the motivations for all the characters are nicely fleshed out. This is a perfect plane book.
Well, it only cost a dollar at the thrift store so I picked it up. I was expecting some sort of time-traveling insanity as Amelia Earhart and Adolf Hitler are involved but what I got instead was a spy thriller featuring Adolf as the big bad but not the antagonist, that title is reserved for some other character trying to pull off the plans to get him back into power, with Earhart in tow of the protagonist. I have to say that I was interested up until about the second third of the book, the show more story was moving just fine but when the protagonist loses his position due to a foil and a feckless president (boy howdy does that characterization stand up), the book started to bog down. However, the Nazis actually became the part of the story I wanted to read after that, especially as the author seemed to tease a possible romance between the protagonist and Earhart (blech!) their part of the story became almost insufferable. Fortunately, that did not happen.
The countdown the author kept of the pending Nazi coup date that could also set off World War III with U.N. forces actually protecting them kept a little suspense going. The last third of the book came to a nice crescendo with the Nazis failing utterly. You do feel somewhat sorry for them then realize who they were (and as characterized by the book) and think 'Good'.
I really can't recommend this book because it was just a typical political/espionage thriller with Hitler and Amelia Earhart thrown in via a Nazi fountain of youth treatment. Although, the term "fountain of youth" did not appear once in the novel. I'm not mad I read it, it was okay for what it turned out to be then again I tend to avoid this genre as I have absolutely no real interest in it.
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This book is full of so many twists and turns I hate to say much of anything about the plot for fear of giving something away. I loved the story, the writing, the intrigue, the guessing games, the sense of what-can-happen-next, and the fact that no matter how complicated or involved the plot got, and it sure did get involved, everything became clear at some point. Not only that, but it had a very satisfying ending.

This one goes on my favorites list. Highly recommended!
Deadly broken glass, a car crash, an explosion, all part of Annie McKay's dream world. Ever since the illness that almost blinded her, the seven-year-old has had disaterous nightmares.
The all come true. So when Annie dreams of her own murder her mother is forced to take action, alone, because not only does she know who the murderer is, but she is beginning to understand the truth behind her daughter's Visions of Terror.

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Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
38
Also by
3
Members
359
Popularity
#66,804
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
7
ISBNs
95
Languages
10

Charts & Graphs