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The Darkest Evening of the Year

The Darkest Evening of the Year

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Manufacturer: Bantam
Category: EBooks

List Price: $20.95
Buy New: $9.99
You Save: $10.96 (52%)

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Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 195 reviews
Sales Rank: 739

Format: Kindle Book
Media: Kindle Edition
Edition: Lrg
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 496

Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
ASIN: B000W9680K

Publication Date: November 27, 2007
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
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






Product Description
With each of his #1 New York Times bestsellers, Dean Koontz has displayed an unparalleled ability to entertain and enlighten readers with novels that capture the essence of our times even as they bring us to the edge of our seats. Now he delivers a heart-gripping tour de force he's been waiting years to write, at once a love story, a thrilling adventure, and a masterwork of suspense that redefines the boundaries of primal fear--and of enduring devotion.

Amy Redwing has dedicated her life to the southern California organization she founded to rescue abandoned and endangered golden retrievers. Among dog lovers, she's a legend for the risks she'll take to save an animal from abuse. Among her friends, Amy's heedless devotion is often cause for concern. To widower Brian McCarthy, whose commitment she can't allow herself to return, Amy's behavior is far more puzzling and hides a shattering secret.

No one is surprised when Amy risks her life to save Nickie, nor when she takes the female golden into her home. The bond between Amy and Nickie is immediate and uncanny. Even her two other goldens, Fred and Ethel, recognize Nickie as special, a natural alpha. But the instant joy Nickie brings is shadowed by a series of eerie incidents. An ominous stranger. A mysterious home invasion.

And the unmistakable sense that someone is watching Amy's every move and that, whoever it is, he's not alone.

Someone has come back to turn Amy into the desperate, hunted creature she's always been there to save. But now there's no one to save Amy and those she loves. From its breathtaking opening scene to its shocking climax, The Darkest Evening of the Year is Dean Koontz at his finest, a transcendent thriller certain to have readers turning pages until dawn.

From the Hardcover edition.




Customer Reviews:   Read 190 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Great Narration!   July 23, 2008
The Darkest Evening of the Year features Kirsten Kairos reading the novel, and she does a great job of bringin out each character and making the lsitening enjoyable.


3 out of 5 stars not one of his best   July 22, 2008
Koontz is my guilty indulgence. He draws you in and makes it impossible to stop reading. He's pretentious, though. In this book, he did a great job explaining how dog rescues work within the context of the story. However, when educating readers about Second Life or the inner workings of lighthouses, he writes in a condescending tone. Granted, his books aren't scholarly works or anything, but should he as the author really be assuming total idiocy of his readership? This is a common problem, not exclusive to this book. A problem with this book in particular is just the way it all wraps up way too quickly and conveniently in the end. One of the things I loved about Koontz was that his books all had a scientific explanation, or if they had a supernatural bent it was more of a suggestion or possibility. I got really frustrated with the lack of mystery in this novel. All that said, I read the book in less than a day and enjoyed doing so very much. GREAT beach read.


1 out of 5 stars The Thrill Is Gone   July 5, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

There was a time, not too long ago even, when the sight of a new Dean Koontz book on the shelve sent me to my wallet to see if I could afford an impulse buy. Dragon Tears, Mr Murder, Velocity, Strangers. Each book kept me riveted and I, more often than not, read the book in one or two days.

Sadly, I can still read Mr. Koontz in one or two days, but not for the same reasons. The prose is nowhere near up to the standards of his older novels. The characters are flat, the stories are lifeless, and if you don't happen to love dogs (and I mean REALLY love dogs. Like to an insane degree), the story will just come off as overdone, preachy and pointless.

In this book, he tried to go back to his roots with the psychopathic-for-no-real-reason villain. But I think it's been so long since he did that, that he's lost the ability to do it believably.

Mr. Koontz has inadvertantly published a parody of himself. The thrill I once felt seeing his name on a bookstore shelf has been replaced with a gentle tug of recognition when I see it in a library. I keep checking out his books, hoping for a hint of what I once loved, but so far I have been burned on "The Good Guy," "The Husband" (for the longest time, I could have sworn those two were the same book), and even "Brother Odd," felt like a pale imitation of "Odd Thomas" (which, BTW, may have been the last Dean Koontz book I truly enjoyed. Perhaps the series is an attempt to hold on to that). And don't even get me started on the Frankenstein books.

I'm probably going to keep checking Koontz books out from the library, and they're still probably going to sit, unread, next to my chair until the due date more often than not.

I cannot begin to say how much it pains me to write a review THIS BAD about an author I used to read nonstop. I would finish one book and then immediately head out to find another. I had a Dean Koontz section on my bookshelf at home.

I would hope that Mr Koontz would stop writing books like this, but his two loves at the moment seem to be religion and dogs, and after one or two books, that really starts to wear out it's welcome. I'll mourn the Koontz of old, and sadly shake my head at this new, lovey-dovey dog-lover Koontz that replaced him.

It IS possible to write a love story to dogs and still fit in a great story (just read "The Story of Edgar Sawtelle" if you don't believe me). Koontz just doesn't seem willing to take time out of his four-or-five-so-so books a year schedule to write one really great one.



5 out of 5 stars Inspiration   June 27, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Of course this book isn't up to par with some of the scariest mind-boggling material that DK has given us in the past. However, I believe that this book is the one that helps us feel closest to his heart.


1 out of 5 stars sick, sad and stupid   June 25, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Just got done listening to the audio book. I had to keep listening to see how much sicker it could get. Unbelievable villains that are so silly they are laughable. Save your money, go to a book store, read the last page of the book and see how STUPID the ending is.

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