Koontzland - Dean Koontz discussion
Dean's Writing & Story Elements
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Objects, Places or Characters Koontz carries through several novels
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Charlotte
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Jun 24, 2011 12:55PM

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message 6:
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Dustin the wind Crazy little brown owl, Colorful Colorado
(last edited Jul 05, 2011 07:21PM)
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One thing in The Good Guy I noticed is the name Nora - There are also characters named Nora in Breathless and Watchers so I have concluded that Dean likes the name Nora :-)



message 7:
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Dustin the wind Crazy little brown owl, Colorful Colorado
(last edited Jul 05, 2011 07:19PM)
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I think Dean just has fun with his fans by throwing in references to his other books.
(view spoiler)
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(view spoiler)



Would you provide some specific examples of such elements? I just finished The Good Guy yesterday.

He uses T.S. Eliot quite a bit in his books especially The Taking. From The Good Guy:
"LIFE YOU MAY EVADE BUT DEATH YOU SHALL NOT"
-T.S. Eliot
"LIFE YOU MAY EVADE BUT DEATH YOU SHALL NOT"
-T.S. Eliot
Masha wrote: "Do you want me to list and then we can brainstorm on why?"
Jason wants a list and he is good at brainstorming so it sounds like a good idea :-)
Jason wants a list and he is good at brainstorming so it sounds like a good idea :-)

The daycare child abuse false accusation backstory (False Memory)
Villain with permanently dilated pupils (Hideaway)
Villain who doesn't know where he came from or why he has certain urges (Mr. Murder)
A minor character with a big scar from mouth ot ear (Dark Rivers of the Heart)
I could swear there was more, but can't remember right now.

Yes, those are all good catches. Considering that The Good Guy was published after all those, it seems that Koontz was probably paying homage to some of his earlier books and putting little Easter eggs in this one for fans to identify. I would guess that this book contains more of such things than any other Koontz that I've read. Now that you mention it, it was never explained why the assassin couldn't remember his past from before he was 18 years old.

One other theme I noticed throughout Koontz work is infertility and/or disastrous childbirth. I wonder if it's something personal, related to the fact that he and his wife never had kids. Not knowing if it was by choice, I can't presume anything.
Jason "plasborgma" wrote: "Yes, those are all good catches. Considering that The Good Guy was published before all those, it seems that Koontz was probably paying homage to some of his earlier books and putting little Easter eggs in this one for fans to identify."
What you talkin 'bout Willis? The Good Guy was published after all those other books Masha mentioned.
What you talkin 'bout Willis? The Good Guy was published after all those other books Masha mentioned.

I did indeed and have edited my earlier post accordingly. My statement was illogical with that error.

You'll be glad to know I just ordered Shattered, The Face of Fear, The Fun House, and The Servants of Twilight. :-)

Hey Dustin Crazy - Noah wears hawaiian shirts in One Door Away From Heaven.

Oh, and Masha, Koontz says in "A Big Little Life" that he and Gerda never had children because they were afraid that if they brought another person into their lives it might damage their close relationship with one another. A little odd in my opinion, but whatever floats their boat, I guess!

J.S, in Life Expectancy he also has a Mercury Mountainer (which is a glorified Ford Explorer).

That's the name of the boy in From the Corner of His Eye. :-)
Tracy wrote: "Hey Dustin Crazy - Noah wears hawaiian shirts in One Door Away From Heaven."
I noticed :-) I've seen Dean wearing Hawaiian shirts too. I just bought my first two Hawaiian shirts so I can be more like Dean and the awesome characters in his books :-)
I noticed :-) I've seen Dean wearing Hawaiian shirts too. I just bought my first two Hawaiian shirts so I can be more like Dean and the awesome characters in his books :-)

You've met him personally?"
I WISH! Getting the vibes from his novels. I like to dream but when I do he is one of the characters in his books. Say like, Noah.

Well it is a pretty good name. ;)
Alex wrote: "I just read The Face of Fear where the main character called his girlfriend Nora."
Well, surprise, surprise :-) That is a book I've been wanting to read. Maybe I'll start nominating it as a group read, unfortunately, I don't think it's available as an audiobook so it'll be harder for me to get through.
Nora wrote: "Well it is a pretty good name. ;) "
I thought you'd think so :-)
Well, surprise, surprise :-) That is a book I've been wanting to read. Maybe I'll start nominating it as a group read, unfortunately, I don't think it's available as an audiobook so it'll be harder for me to get through.
Nora wrote: "Well it is a pretty good name. ;) "
I thought you'd think so :-)


I've noticed that too. :-) There are a few more he likes to use often. Let's see if anyone else can name some.

The obvious themes he usually carries over from novel to novel deal with his characters.. There is often a mention of Catholics, or some sort of monastery, the belief that human beings are naturally GOOD (or at least his characters are practically saints), and of course... in the ultimate battle of good and evil, good always wins. These are also all reasons why I love Dean Koontz! Im not complaining:)
A lot of his main characters have suffered some sort of serious abuse.
Also he uses the same types of guns.. A LOT. I always fit in the conversations with my husband and father in law though.. Whenever there is a conversation about guns just start throwing out Smith & Wesson" .38's Chief Specials, Revolvers & The Heckler & Koch P7 (Mr. Murder, Tick Tock)
I have no idea what any of that means:)
Kelsey wrote: "Also he uses the same types of guns.. A LOT. I always fit in the conversations with my husband and father in law though.. Whenever there is a conversation about guns just start throwing out Smith & Wesson" .38's Chief Specials, Revolvers & The Heckler & Koch P7 (Mr. Murder, Tick Tock)
I have no idea what any of that means:)"
That is very funny :-D
I have no idea what any of that means:)"
That is very funny :-D

Me too, and I agree it, both are Very good! :)

There is a Nora mentioned in his newest one too - 77 Shadow Street but I think she's already dead before we begin :-)

BOOOOOO!!!!!!!

Other words that seem to come up a bit are blacktop, preternaturally and evidently. I wouldn't consider this recycling though. I consider using specific words time and time again is more of an author signature.

The best ending I've seen from him so far was in Lightning.
"Destiny struggles to reassert the pattern that was meant to be. But sometimes, happily, it fails."
"Destiny struggles to reassert the pattern that was meant to be, Laura thought. And sometimes, happily, it succeeds."
Just a beautifully done ending.

The "signature" concept is interesting. It didn't occur to me, but come to think of it you have great movie directors doing pretty much the same thing over and over, and that's what makes them special.

This is a touchy subject for me and I intend to talk about it at greater length in the 77 Shadow Street thread, as soon as I have time to read all the existing posts there. For now, I'll just point out that science, technology, or any form of knowledge/information is neither good nor evil--it is neutral. It's how humans choose to use them that can either be good or evil. Yet Koontz disregards that in 77 Shadow Street, when (view spoiler) . That really got me angry and caused me to question Koontz's own morality. It also saddened me quite a bit, because the morality inherent in each was one of the things I've always admired most about his books.

Jason "plasborgma" wrote: "This is a touchy subject for me and I intend to talk about it at greater length in the 77 Shadow Street thread, as soon as I have time to read all the existing posts there. For now, I'll just point out that science, technology, or any form of knowledge/information is neither good nor evil--it is neutral. It's how humans choose to use them that can either be good or evil. Yet Koontz disregards that in 77 Shadow Street, when"
I thought you might have a few words to say :-)
I thought you might have a few words to say :-)
Books mentioned in this topic
Red Dragon (other topics)Breathless (other topics)
The Good Guy (other topics)
Watchers (other topics)
The Good Guy (other topics)
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