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  2. Dean Koontz bibliography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dean_Koontz_bibliography

    1.6 Jane Hawk Series. 1.7 Nameless. 1.7.1 Season One. ... Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Essays and introductions

  3. Moonlight Bay Trilogy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moonlight_Bay_Trilogy

    In an interview at the end of 2017, Koontz says that he intends to finish Ride the Storm once he finishes the 7th book in his Jane Hawk series. [ 2 ] The fifth and final book in the Jane Hawk series - The Night Window - was published on May 14, 2019 [ 3 ] but there is still no definitive word on if or when Ride the Storm will be released.

  4. Ride the Storm (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ride_the_Storm_(novel)

    Ride the Storm is the long-planned final book in the Moonlight Bay Trilogy, to be written by American author Dean Koontz.The book is the third installment featuring Christopher Snow, a young man who suffers from the rare (but real) disease called XP (xeroderma pigmentosum).

  5. Midnight (Koontz novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midnight_(Koontz_novel)

    Tessa Jane Lockland, sister of Capshaw, also arrives in Moonlight Cove to investigate her sister's death. Chrissie Foster, an eleven-year-old girl who lives on a farm north of town, accidentally witnesses her parents in a physically altered state - part-human and part-beast - and is forced to flee for her life.

  6. Moo (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moo_(novel)

    Moo is a 1995 novel by Jane Smiley.Its setting is a large university, known familiarly as "Moo U" because of its large agricultural college, in the American Midwest.The novel is a satire that uses a sprawling narrative style, following the lives of dozens of characters over the course of the 1989–1990 academic year.

  7. An Essay on the Art of Ingeniously Tormenting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An_Essay_on_the_Art_of...

    The Essay was Collier's first work, and operates as a satirical advice book on how to nag. It was modelled after Jonathan Swift's satirical essays, and is intended to "teach" a reader the various methods for "teasing and mortifying" one's acquaintances. It is divided into two sections that are organised for "advice" to specific groups, and it ...

  8. Plan of a Novel, according to Hints from Various Quarters

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plan_of_a_Novel,_according...

    The intention of the work was to set down the essential parts of the "ideal novel". Austen was following, and guying, the recommendations of Clarke. [1] The work was also influenced by some of Austen's personal circle with views on the novel of courtship, and names are recorded in the margins of the manuscript; [9] they included William Gifford, her publisher, and her niece Fanny Knight.

  9. The Watsons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Watsons

    A further continuation came from John Coates (1912–1963), a writer with no family connection but who had earlier written a time-travel novel, Here Today (1949), featuring a man who claimed to have wooed Jane Austen. [18] His The Watsons: Jane Austen's fragment continued and completed appeared from British and American publishers in 1958. [19]