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Title: Fear Nothing
Series: Moonlight Bay #1
Author: Dean Koontz
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Thriller
Pages: 450
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis: |
Christopher Snow was born afflicted with (insert really long medically sounding name), otherwise known as XP. His body can’t heal from UV damage and something like a flashlight can take years off his life or make him go blind in months. He is now 28 and his parents have sacrificed a lot to give him as much freedom as possible. He roams the night, writes successful novels and surfs.
Several months ago his mother died in a car accident. The book opens with his father expiring from cancer in the local hospital. Everything Chris ever starts to go sidewise as he sees the local mortician replace his father’s body with some hitchhiker’s. His father’s body is loaded into a van and taken away to Wyvern, a supposedly closed military base.
During the next 2 days Chris uncovers a lot of secrets hiding in Moonlight Bay. His mother was involved in genetic experimentation with the aim of helping cure Chris’s XP. Chris’s father’s cancer might have been caused by a rogue genetic experiment gone awry. Chris finds out that the experiments have been successful, but not in the way his mother intended. The politicians and top army brass have used it to enhance intelligence in animals and to transfer animal characteristics to humans. Unfortunately, the carrier evolved and people began becoming infected unknowingly and spreading it even outside of Moonlight Bay.
Several of the solid citizens of Moonlight Bay have already fallen to the gene therapy. The Chief of Police dreams of raping and killing little girls. He tries to kill Christopher to keep his secret but dies in the attempt. A troup of bloody thirsty enhanced monkey’s attack Chris, his girlfriend and his beach bum friend one night. The troup is led by a court-martialed sociopath who has been hiding his own “becoming” from all his superiors.
To top it all off, it turns out that Chris’s own dog, Orson, is the product of the tests and is just as intelligent as a human. Orson, however, shows no sign of the psychopathic murderous tendencies exhibited in almost all the other patients that Chris has seen.
The book ends with Chris realizing that he simply can’t fight this end of the world as we know it.
My Thoughts: |
I actually read the sequel to this 18 years ago. I wasn’t reviewing per se, so I didn’t remember any details and so nothing was spoiled for this book. Just an anecdote, that is all.
In the character of Chris Snow are the seeds that will, 5 years later, turn into Odd Thomas and that much more successful series.
I found the scene between Chris and the Chief of Police to be as horrific as Koontz intended without it being offensive. There is nothing graphic in what Koontz writes and yet when the Chief is talking to Chris about his nightmares and his plans and his descent into animal savagery, I was horrified. It walked the line of talking about something absolutely evil without crossing that line into being voyeuristic about it. More authors should take note, as it takes real skill to write that way.
I enjoyed this but once again, like his Frankenstein series, Koontz is actually only telling one story and splitting it up into “books” to satisfy publishing demands. This book ends with Chris and Co surviving the attacks by various infected creatures, human or otherwise but the threat is so big that it IS the end of the world as humans know it. If I hadn’t known there was another book, I would have assumed this was a standalone with the Big Ending (ie, the end of the world) left up in the air for the readers to imagine.
Considering how proto-Odd Thomas Chris Snow is, I was figuring that Snow’s girlfriend was going to die the whole book. Color me pleasantly surprised when she made it through almost unscathed. That’ll teach me to be cynical.
The other thing I’m learning about Koontz seems to be that he likes to write about short time periods. The first ¾’s of the book only took 12hrs and the final ¼ was the next 24. Thirty-six hours for a 450 page book. I’ll have to remember that so I don’t expect dramas drawn out over the years.
★★★☆½
This reminds me a lot of another Dean Koontz book, Watchers. That was the first Dean Koontz I read. I quite like his books but I think he reuses the same story lines a lot and it puts me off reading him which is a shame because I do actually enjoy his writing
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He does indeed tell a very similar story. Some of the same elements are always scattered through whatever current one he’s working on.
Right now I’m cycling through him every 6-8 weeks. I might have to move that up to 12-16 if I find the repetitiveness really starts to bother me.
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I read the Frankenstein books but felt it dragged on too much in places for me. It sounds like this series might be the same for me.
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Yeah, the frankenstein books had a lot of potential but he tried to turn it into a series that didn’t really work out.
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I’ve never read Koontz, but I want to try Odd Thomas. I enjoyed the movie adaptation of it, so I’m curious about the book.
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That is how I got into Koontz as well. Saw the Odd Thomas movie, loved it and read the book. That propelled me to the entire series which has led to me reading Koontz over all. 😀
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I haven’t read anything by Koontz – what would you recommend as a good sample?
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Odd Thomas.
That is the best Koontz I have read so far. Of course, it is the start of a 7 book serie, so be aware.
For standalone, I enjoyed his 77 Shadow Street the most so far.
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The premise sounds very interesting, that of an individual who must avoid light – any kind of light – at all costs, but I’m uncertain about the viral contamination that brings out the “animal” in human beings, since it sounds more like a trashy horror B-movie…
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It is definitely a mix of the two. The viral aspect is what drives the story forward, so if it doesn’t appeal to you, I’d be leery of starting this.
If you’ve ever read the odd thomas novels and how Odd is portrayed in those books, Snow is portrayed almost exactly the same way.
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The start of the synopsis almost made me think of a movie called powder… 3,5 for Koontz this time seems loke an oke read yeah?
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Yes, 3.5 is a “good” rating for Koontz. I’ll be satisfied with 3’s myself. I’m not sure if even any of the Odd Thomas books got above 3.5 and I rather enjoyed the whole series.
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Sounds like a really interesting story. Shame Koontz splits up one story for publishing demands- that’s a real pain. hehe yeah silly you for being so cynical- I reckon it’s only about 99% of love interests that don’t survive in books like this 😉 Wow 36 hours in 450 pages- that’s quite the feat! Great review!
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Thanks.
Koontz definitely seems to love writing about small time periods even while writing a lot ABOUT that tiny time 😀
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Pretty cool that you could draw comparisons between both series. And the fact that it was unpredictable (at least the girlfriend’s faith) is also nice.
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I think Koontz likes to write from a script. I have this feeling I’ll be reading a variation on the same thing for most of his stuff. As long as I like that script, I should be ok 😉
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