By the Light of the Moon
by
Dean Koontz
BONUS: This edition contains an excerpt from Dean Koontz's Odd Apocalypse.
Dean Koontz has surpassed his longtime reputation as “America’s most popular suspense novelist”(Rolling Stone) to become one of the most celebrated and successful writers of our time. Reviewers hail his boundless originality, his art, his unparalleled ability to create highly textured, riveting drama...more
Dean Koontz has surpassed his longtime reputation as “America’s most popular suspense novelist”(Rolling Stone) to become one of the most celebrated and successful writers of our time. Reviewers hail his boundless originality, his art, his unparalleled ability to create highly textured, riveting drama...more
ebook, 0 pages
Published
June 15th 2007
by Bantam
(first published January 1st 2002)
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4 1/2 stars. Two strangers, Jilly and Dylan, become linked when a mad scientist knocks them out and injects them with a strange serum while mumbling about the fact that they'll either go mad or be very much improved by his "stuff". He warns them that sinister killers will soon be after them if they don't hit the road asap. When Jilly discovers that her car, stolen by "Frankenstein" (as they dub him), has been torched with "Frankenstein" still inside she begins to take the dire warnings seriously...more
This story starts out great. 3 characters are brought together by chance and circumstance and injected with an evil substance of God knows what by a mad scientist type of man. They have to do research to find out what they've been injected with and also exactly what is at store in their future. They come to learn that each of them has developed some type of supernatural-like abilities which will come in handy later while dodging reckless gunmen. However, later on the story kind of fizzles out be...more
This was my first Dean Koontz novel and a thorough disappointment, especially bearing in mind how critically acclaimed a writer he is supposed to be.
The plot is wanting and slow - paced. Koontz is spending far too much time on the thorough and often dragging description of his protagonists' visions, thereby neglecting the advancement of his plot.
Logically speaking, I was unable to understand why "nanobot - implants" would enable anyone to gain the ability to physically fold from one place to a...more
The plot is wanting and slow - paced. Koontz is spending far too much time on the thorough and often dragging description of his protagonists' visions, thereby neglecting the advancement of his plot.
Logically speaking, I was unable to understand why "nanobot - implants" would enable anyone to gain the ability to physically fold from one place to a...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
Dean Koontz has surpassed his longtime reputation as “America’s most popular suspense novelist”(Rolling Stone) to become one of the most celebrated and successful writers of our time. Reviewers hail his boundless originality, his art, his unparalleled ability to create highly textured, riveting drama, at once viscerally familiar and utterly unique.
Author of one #1 New York Times bestseller after another, Koontz is at the pinnacle of his powers, spinning mysteries and miracles, enthralling tales
...more
Over the years I've sometimes dipped my toe into horror novels, some by the likes of Stephen King and Clive Barker. Books by Dean Koontz – of which I’ve read many - apparently get put into this same category although I'm not sure why. Many of the books I've read by Koontz aren't really horror. I would tend to call them action thrillers.
Okay - some of his stories do have supernatural or superhuman aspects to them, this one included (albeit with a slightly futuristic/scientific spin to it). But th...more
Okay - some of his stories do have supernatural or superhuman aspects to them, this one included (albeit with a slightly futuristic/scientific spin to it). But th...more
I have read several other Dean Koontz books, so my assumptions about By the Light of the Moon were somewhat set by those experiences. Overall, I found this book disappointing.
In thinking about it, this books surprisingly failed in three areas the author usually shines.
First, the characters - Dylan, Jilly and Shep lacked the depth that Mr. Koontz usually brings to his work. They had interesting backgrounds - which were magnified and sometimes awkwardly intertwined by their encounter with nanotech...more
In thinking about it, this books surprisingly failed in three areas the author usually shines.
First, the characters - Dylan, Jilly and Shep lacked the depth that Mr. Koontz usually brings to his work. They had interesting backgrounds - which were magnified and sometimes awkwardly intertwined by their encounter with nanotech...more
I've been reading Koontz since I was a teenager, and have always liked his benevolence towards his main characters. He writes about very bad things happening to very good people (which is not to say that they're all saints), and this makes you root for them and despise the villains with all your might.
I really couldn't make myself care too much about Jilly, Dylan or Shep, though. The premise of the story was intriguing enough but halfway through I found myself reading on in the hope that the ini...more
I really couldn't make myself care too much about Jilly, Dylan or Shep, though. The premise of the story was intriguing enough but halfway through I found myself reading on in the hope that the ini...more
I've read so many of Dean Koontz's novels over the years that when I first saw this one in a used book store, I wasn't sure if I had read it previously already, glanced at the first few pages and it didn't seem too familiar so said "oh well, I can always give it to a friend If I already have it." I'm so glad I took the plunge and bought it. The story was compelling, enough so that I hope there will be several sequels a la his "Odd Thomas" series, which I also enjoy a lot. There were lines in the...more
Another great book by Koontz! Twisted right up till the end. Dylan is the main caretaker of his autistic brother Shep and they are enjoying a typical night in a hotel when a strange man infects them both with a strange solution. Jilly in another customer at the hotel who has an encounter with this strange man and the three of them embark on an adventure that has them united. Jilly does not trust men and you will learn about her current companion and her past history while Dylan's and Shep's hist...more
Jan 31, 2011
Alex Telander
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
books-read-in-2003
It’s quite interesting to discover that with the publication of each of Dean Koontz’s books, there is a formula at work: each year the stories improve, while the writing suffers. By the Light of the Moon is no exception, with a writing style that often annoys, with its stupidly open manner and constantly inane similes that force the reader to question why bother? The trick is to stick with it to the end, and By the Light of the Moon eventually pays off.
The story is an average one that seems to b...more
The story is an average one that seems to b...more
An exact cross of Creighton's "Prey" and King's "Dead Zone"...
We stopped reading Dean Koontz about 20 years ago as his plots and often very long stories were just a little too fantastic, in the supernatural sense, for our taste. We see in the two decades since, he has been a prolific publisher, with the now some 40 novels to his credit implying a bazillion fans.
"Moon" gets off to a fast start: Dylan O'Connor, a struggling artist and caretaker for his semi-autistic brother Shep, and a struggling...more
We stopped reading Dean Koontz about 20 years ago as his plots and often very long stories were just a little too fantastic, in the supernatural sense, for our taste. We see in the two decades since, he has been a prolific publisher, with the now some 40 novels to his credit implying a bazillion fans.
"Moon" gets off to a fast start: Dylan O'Connor, a struggling artist and caretaker for his semi-autistic brother Shep, and a struggling...more
This being Dean Koontz...was expecting a horror novel. However, this one only falls into that genre in a slight way. Revealing which genre it really is might give too much away, so I won't.
The story really kept me guessing, often riveted. Everything is revealed slowly and paced well, veering off in one crazy direction after another.
Writing style was excellent, good flow, not too much of the over-explanation of actions or reasons for (a pet peave of mine...you can tell when writers pad to get...more
The story really kept me guessing, often riveted. Everything is revealed slowly and paced well, veering off in one crazy direction after another.
Writing style was excellent, good flow, not too much of the over-explanation of actions or reasons for (a pet peave of mine...you can tell when writers pad to get...more
This book has the best opening paragraph I have ever read! Intriguing, mysterious, and fast-paced, it fits the story well. Instantly, you, along with the main characters, are set into a state of confusion. You'll stay there for most of the book, but know that you are in capable hands.
Of all the characters, I loved Shepard the most. However, I was disappointed that we never got into Shepard's mind. Dean Koontz has such a talent for fleshing out marginal and unusual viewpoints (like the dog in Dra...more
Of all the characters, I loved Shepard the most. However, I was disappointed that we never got into Shepard's mind. Dean Koontz has such a talent for fleshing out marginal and unusual viewpoints (like the dog in Dra...more
Nov 29, 2007
Mrs. Shane
rated it
2 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
out-of-the-ordinary
IMO, it was just too darn descriptive. I found myself skipping over whole pages of descriptions to get to the actual story (which wasn't too bad in and of itself). It is like the writer doesn't realize we have imaginations and can create most of the stuff he is writing about already in our head as we read the book. I want to try reading something else of his to see if this happens all the time or if it is just in this one.
Jun 03, 2012
Nigel
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
Suspense readers
I've had this on my shelf for years and I've no idea why I haven't started it before. Three quarters of the way through and Koontz's characters are brilliant - flawed, antagonistic and growing across their arcs. He does a great job of showing the development of the special changes in the characters (I won't tell to avoid spoiling the book). Hope to finish this over the weekend.
I finished on Saturday night. Koontz's characters are very real, filled with flaws and habits, ticks and tells. Shep is...more
I finished on Saturday night. Koontz's characters are very real, filled with flaws and habits, ticks and tells. Shep is...more
Trademark Dean Koontz. (Suspense, with a Ford vehicle, set somewhere in California. These markers are ones I have come to love. Perhaps if you tore the cover and made me read it without knowing who wrote it, I would still recognize the author in the end.)
The seemingly endless chase, the rapid heartbeats as byproducts of the suspense, the unexpected twists. But more than that, this book is essentially a stand against evil; its story is one that hopes to persist in the fight with all that is bad.
A...more
The seemingly endless chase, the rapid heartbeats as byproducts of the suspense, the unexpected twists. But more than that, this book is essentially a stand against evil; its story is one that hopes to persist in the fight with all that is bad.
A...more
Jun 13, 2012
Sarah E.
rated it
1 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
to-remain-unfinished
I wanted to like this book, I really did. It sounded interesting enough and actually like something I would enjoy. But as good as the actual premise of the book was, I couldn't get past what I hated about this guy's writing. I know that Koontz is popular, and he is one of my step mom's favorites, there were just some things about his writing that made me angry, and I would be sitting there fuming about it as I was trying to read.
I love commas. In moderation. I felt that with the way that Koontz...more
I love commas. In moderation. I felt that with the way that Koontz...more
Mr. Koontz has crafted a thriller that skirts the edge of the supernatural to bring us—superheroes. Oh, they’re not wearing capes of spandex but that’s what the three protagonists of this book have become, thanks to the attacks of a mad scientist who fancies himself a new Frankenstein.
This kind of tampering with nature and human nature isn’t a new topic with Mr. Koontz and the pointed commentary he has to make against such acts is as sobering as anything Mary Shelley ever wrote. But Mr. Koontz l...more
This kind of tampering with nature and human nature isn’t a new topic with Mr. Koontz and the pointed commentary he has to make against such acts is as sobering as anything Mary Shelley ever wrote. But Mr. Koontz l...more
By The Light of The Moon starts strong. The first 100 pages are Koontz firing on all cylinders. We’ve got this creepy genius doctor injecting Dylan O’Conner with a strange substance that he calls “stuff.” Koontz does a great job reminding us readers that this stuff could be killing Dylan or it could be doing amazing things.
Dylan’s 20 year old autistic brother Shepard is a faithful, sympathetic sidekick. Shep’s heartbreaking condition makes him talk like a thesaurus rambling different definitions...more
Dylan’s 20 year old autistic brother Shepard is a faithful, sympathetic sidekick. Shep’s heartbreaking condition makes him talk like a thesaurus rambling different definitions...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
First of all, great title. Great cover, for that matter. It almost has this aura of mystery and creepiness when you look at it. That's a good sign that you're about to read some tasty tripped-out Koontz material. Then, you get to the first paragraph, and you find out that this guy named Dylan gets mugged and injected with an unknown substance by some random wacko. But instead of elaborating, there's this whole intro scene in a diner. Koontz decided (wisely, I might add) to feed the reader a succ...more
Ahhh, Mr Koontz, you have again, not failed to deliver a light science fiction action adventure drama with a happy ending.
Apart from a few pages of existential-psycho-bicker-babble in the first third of the book, I was thrilled.
Characters a wee bit flat (I barely even remember their names!), a reveal of the past that shaped the male protagonist added to his characer, and the female character was flat until the very end when she learned a new "trick"...
and THE END!! WOO WOO!! I love happy ending...more
Apart from a few pages of existential-psycho-bicker-babble in the first third of the book, I was thrilled.
Characters a wee bit flat (I barely even remember their names!), a reveal of the past that shaped the male protagonist added to his characer, and the female character was flat until the very end when she learned a new "trick"...
and THE END!! WOO WOO!! I love happy ending...more
Suspense author Dean Koontz takes on the technothriller genre in "By The Light of the Moon."
Dylan and Jilly are connected only by staying at the same inexpensive motel, but they are both injected with "stuff" (as the perpetrator calls it) that changes their lives. Their sensory perceptions are heightened, and it soon becomes apparent that part of the key to what they've been dosed with lies in the cryptic comments made by Dylan's autistic brother.
Evading thugs who are tailing them with murderous...more
Dylan and Jilly are connected only by staying at the same inexpensive motel, but they are both injected with "stuff" (as the perpetrator calls it) that changes their lives. Their sensory perceptions are heightened, and it soon becomes apparent that part of the key to what they've been dosed with lies in the cryptic comments made by Dylan's autistic brother.
Evading thugs who are tailing them with murderous...more
Feb 05, 2010
Jodi
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
thriller readers
Shelves:
thrillers
I don't normally read books by Dean Koontz because quite frankly some of his books have scared the socks off of me. I bought this for a quarter at a garage sale (along with 2 other of his books) for a quarter each. Don't know why, but I bought it but have put off reading it for over a year because I didn't know if I could handle it. Like the one of his I read a few months ago, this one wasn't too scary - just a little strange. It had more the feel of a James Patterson Thriller instead of a Steph...more
This book is about a man and his autistic brother and a woman in the hotel room next to them all being injected with an unknown substance by a scientist before he is killed. The story unfolds slowly with the characters banding together and trying to escape the people looking for the substance, while trying to figure out what it is. This book showed me that anybody’s story can be interesting if it is told right. I also learned that relationships between characters can add a whole other dimension...more
A decent story and interesting premise, but I found the female character "Jilly" to be an annoying pain is the a**. She is suppose to be this strong woman, who has been hurt by boyfriends and a bad daddy in the the past blah blah blah. (yea, and who hasn't? )
her unique attribute is that she's a stand up comic that doesn't have a single funny line, yet is suppose to be successfully traveling clubs around the country, gainfully employed??. She whines endlessly, gets into stupid arguments with th...more
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| Koontzland - Dean...: By the Light of the Moon (Mini-Group Read) | 128 | 69 | May 15, 2013 09:52am |
Acknowledged as "America's most popular suspense novelist" (Rolling Stone) and as one of today's most celebrated and successful writers, Dean Ray Koontz has earned the devotion of millions of readers around the world and the praise of critics everywhere for tales of character, mystery, and adventure that strike to the core of what it means to be human.
Dean R. Koontz has also published under the na...more
More about Dean Koontz...
Dean R. Koontz has also published under the na...more
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“...what makes humanity beautiful is our free will, our individuality, our endless striving in spite of our imperfection.
BY THE LIGHT OF THE MOON
Chapter 27 Page 214”
—
6 people liked it
BY THE LIGHT OF THE MOON
Chapter 27 Page 214”
“With a thick note of disbelief in her voice, Jilly said, 'You went through the wall to California?'
[Dylan] 'Yeah. Why not? Where'd you think we went-Narnia? Oz? Middle Earth? California's weirder than any of those places, anyway.'"
Page 246”
—
4 people liked it
More quotes…
[Dylan] 'Yeah. Why not? Where'd you think we went-Narnia? Oz? Middle Earth? California's weirder than any of those places, anyway.'"
Page 246”

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Aug 26, 2011 08:07pm
Aug 28, 2011 02:41pm