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Strange Highways is a collection of 12 short stories and two novels by American author Dean Koontz, released in May 1995. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Four of the stories are revised from their originals. A British edition of the book (without the novella Chase ) was previously issued by Headline in April 1995.
Title Year Type Pages Notes 1: The Silent Corner: 2017: novel: 464: 2: The Whispering Room: 2017: novel: 528: 0.5: The Bone Farm: 2018: novella: N/A: Audio only 3 ...
Koontz was taken with the charity while he was researching his novel Midnight, a book which included a CCI-trained dog, a black Labrador Retriever, named Moose. In 2004, Koontz wrote and edited Life Is Good: Lessons in Joyful Living in her name, and in 2005, Koontz wrote a second book credited to Trixie, Christmas Is Good. Both books are ...
By the Light of the Moon is a novel by American author Dean Koontz, released in 2002.. The novel combines science fiction and suspense, following three people who are injected with nanotechnology by an amoral doctor and subsequently develop superhuman abilities.
A series of low-budget horror films was loosely based on the book. Watchers; Watchers II; Watchers III; Watchers Reborn; In the film adaptation Travis is a sixteen-year-old boy, and Nora is his mother. The Outsider is renamed OXCOM, and Vince Nasco is replaced by NSO agents searching for the monster.
A puppet master has his hands full when his puppets - living puppets - convince his half-witted assistant to kill him and set them free. When freed from the puppet master, who they had once thought of as cruel and thoughtless, they find themselves in what may be an even worse situation.
What: Bestselling author Dean Koontz joins the L.A. Times Book Club to discuss “The Bad Weather Friend” with Times assistant managing editor Samantha Melbourneweaver. When: 1 p.m. Pacific Jan. 28
Midnight was Dean Koontz's first No. 1 hardcover on the New York Times bestseller list. [1] Midnight includes a mixture of plots from the 1950s film Invasion of the Body Snatchers and H.G. Wells' tale The Island of Dr. Moreau. Koontz mentions both of these later in the novel. [2]