Ad
related to: dean koontz and his wife jennifer
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Koontz was born on July 9, 1945, in Everett, Pennsylvania, the son of Florence (née Logue) and Raymond Koontz. [3] [4] He has said that he was regularly beaten and abused by his alcoholic father, which influenced his later writing, as also did the courage of his physically diminutive mother in standing up to her husband. [5]
From the Corner of His Eye is a novel by best-selling author Dean Koontz, released in 2000. It is the story of a boy named Barty Lampion, a ruthless killer named Junior Cain, and a girl named Angel, born as the result of a rape.
The Husband is a novel by the best-selling author Dean Koontz, released in 2006. [1] ... receives a phone call from someone claiming to have kidnapped his wife Holly ...
Dean Koontz with his beloved golden retriever, Elsa. Koontz and his wife, Gerda, are longtime supporters of Canine Companions for Independence. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Shadowfires is a novel by American writer Dean Koontz, released in 1987. [1] Koontz's attempt at a straightforward horror novel, it was originally released as Shadow Fires [citation needed] under the pseudonym Leigh Nichols, [1] and tells the story of a young woman who, in the process of getting a divorce from her husband of seven years, becomes a widow after a traffic accident.
The priest kills his wife and is then killed by the sheriff, who is in turn killed by one of his henchmen. The henchman, identified primarily as 'Meth Mouth' talks to Odd, still believing him to be a psychic government agent. While laughing over a joke of Meth Mouth's, Odd shoots him under the table with the wife's gun.
Sole Survivor is a novel by the best-selling author Dean Koontz, published in 1997. It centres around a man named Joe, who having lost his young family in a plane crash, is mysteriously approached by a woman who claims to have survived it. It was adapted into the 2000 film Sole Survivor.
"A Mouse in the Walls of the Global Village" (1972; in Again, Dangerous Visions; in the original Afterword, Koontz mentions having written Hung,"set in the hippie subculture of a small university", [4] which tried to show that Marshall McLuhan's concept of the global village was "on the right track" and that "our world was already being ...