Wolverine Books
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Books » Mystery & Thrillers: Thrillers: General » The Darkest Evening of the Year (Dean Koontz)  
Categories
Books
DVDs
Music
Magazines
VHS
Food
Jewelry
Apparel
Sporting Goods
Outdoor
Subcategories
Mass Market
Trade

BlogRoll

Travel With Books

Related Categories
• Mystery & Thrillers: Thrillers: General
General
Archive
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
• Mystery & Thrillers: General
General
Archive
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
• Literature & Fiction
Large Print
Formats
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
• Mystery & Thrillers
Large Print
Formats
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
• Suspense
Thrillers
Mystery & Thrillers
Subjects
Books
• Koontz, Dean
( K )
Authors, A-Z
Mystery & Thrillers
Subjects
• Large Print
Format (binding)
Refinements
Books
• Paperback
Format (binding)
Refinements
Books
• Printed Books
Binding (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books

The Darkest Evening of the Year (Dean Koontz)

The Darkest Evening of the Year (Dean Koontz)
Author: Dean Koontz
Publisher: Random House Large Print
Category: Book

List Price: $27.00
Buy New: $12.96
You Save: $14.04 (52%)



New (23) Used (11) from $6.01

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 183 reviews
Sales Rank: 418608

Format: Large Print
Media: Paperback
Edition: Lrg
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 496
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.1 x 1.2

ISBN: 0739327429
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780739327425
ASIN: 0739327429

Publication Date: November 27, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - The Darkest Evening of the Year
  • Paperback - Darkest Evening of the Year, The
  • Mass Market Paperback - The Darkest Evening of the Year
  • Mass Market Paperback - The Darkest Evening of the Year
  • Audio CD - The Darkest Evening of the Year
  • Kindle Edition - The Darkest Evening of the Year
  • Audio Cassette - The Darkest Evening of the Year

Similar Items:

  • The Good Guy
  • Duma Key: A Novel
  • Odd Hours
  • Blaze: A Novel
  • Double Cross (Alex Cross)

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Amazon.com Exclusive:
The Darkest Ice Cream of the Year by Dean Koontz

I once said writing a novel is sometimes like making love and sometimes like having a tooth pulled--and sometimes like making love while having a tooth pulled. I arrived at one of those joyful yet excruciating moments while working on The Darkest Evening of the Year.

Because I am obsessive about the revision of each page--the word fussbudget is embarrassingly apt when I am brooding over whether to use a comma or a semicolon--I have more than once held on to a manuscript until the drop-dead date for delivery. When that date rolled around for this book, I had written everything, but I was unwilling to send all of it to my editor. I withheld the last fifty pages for another four days, causing a quiet panic in those at my publishing house who are responsible for meeting production deadlines.

Although the book was done, I felt that something was wrong with Chapter 63. The action worked, the characters were in character, the mood was sustained...but something felt wrong with it, some fine point of the villain's motivation. Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, I worked 12-hour days, trying to identify the source of my doubt, but couldn't specify it to my satisfaction.

Nothing like this had ever happened to me. Previously, my worst struggles with a story had come in the first two-thirds, and the final third had been, if not a sweet swift toboggan run, at least a sleigh ride.

Sunday, I got up at 6:00 and set to work, revising, looking for the thorn I could feel but couldn't see--and ended up working 22 hours, eating at my desk, before tumbling to the problem at 4:00 a.m. Monday morning. "Eureka!" I cried, but I was so weary and my voice was so weak that my shout of jubilation came out as a squeak.

The revisions required to Chapter 63 were minor, but after working 58 hours in four days, after having passed a night without sleep, I was unable to focus sharply enough to get them done in the little time that remained before the production schedule would be derailed. In desperation, I turned to that source of creative energy and literary enlightenment that is without equal: ice cream.

I shuffled to the kitchen and snared a Dreyer's Slow-Churned Vanilla Almond Crunch bar from the freezer. I devoured this sweet-and-creamy muse, and felt the scales lift from my eyes; inspiration sparkled between my ears. I finished the revisions and e-mailed the final version of Chapter 63 to my editor with not a minute to spare. Although the American Heart Association will take issue with me, my advice to young writers stuck on a scene is to stop worrying about your arteries and give your wheel-spinning imagination what it needs to find traction: a tasty shot of fat and sugar.

--Dean Koontz, October 2007






Product Description
With each of his #1 New York Times bestsellers, Dean Koontz has displayed an unparalleled ability to entertain and enlighten readers with novels that capture the essence of our times even as they bring us to the edge of our seats. Now he delivers a heart-gripping tour de force he’s been waiting years to write, at once a love story, a thrilling adventure, and a masterwork of suspense that redefines the boundaries of primal fear—and of enduring devotion.

Amy Redwing has dedicated her life to the southern California organization she founded to rescue abandoned and endangered golden retrievers. Among dog lovers, she’s a legend for the risks she’ll take to save an animal from abuse. Among her friends, Amy’s heedless devotion is often cause for concern. To widower Brian McCarthy, whose commitment she can’t allow herself to return, Amy’s behavior is far more puzzling and hides a shattering secret.

No one is surprised when Amy risks her life to save Nickie, nor when she takes the female golden into her home. The bond between Amy and Nickie is immediate and uncanny. Even her two other goldens, Fred and Ethel, recognize Nickie as special, a natural alpha. But the instant joy Nickie brings is shadowed by a series of eerie incidents. An ominous stranger. A mysterious home invasion.

And the unmistakable sense that someone is watching Amy’s every move and that, whoever it is, he’s not alone.

Someone has come back to turn Amy into the desperate, hunted creature she’s always been there to save. But now there’s no one to save Amy and those she loves. From its breathtaking opening scene to its shocking climax, The Darkest Evening of the Year is Dean Koontz at his finest, a transcendent thriller certain to have readers turning pages until dawn.


From the Hardcover edition.



Customer Reviews:   Read 178 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars Not a Koontz Best   May 17, 2008
The book had heart, suspense, and terror, but it lacked a little something. I'm not sure what. I believe, maybe, more convincing characters. Yes, these characters were all very much like Koontz characters, wonderfully wierd, each in their own way, but I didn't buy into all of their personalities, like I have with his other characters. Odd Thomas, for example, is an interesting idea of a somewhat timid anyman going against the evils not only in this world but beyond it. So, one has an easy time relating to the protagonist; it could be him or her fighting against the perils of a great satan. Much easier to digest, and love.


2 out of 5 stars Cop-Out Ending   May 13, 2008
I have a love-hate relationship with Koontz - I find his work to be quite kitschy a lot of the time, but I can't seem to stop myself from picking up his more interesting sounding books. The Darkest Evening of the Year was given to me as a gift, and it was all well and good up until the last few pages. Koontz copped out of an (for once) unexpected, but interesting nonetheless, ending to opt for some bizarre and impossible twist of fate to make sure any average, casual readers aren't upset. I found it trite, and for me, it ruined the way I felt about the entire book.

If you like suspense novels, go pick up Intensity or another of Koontz' better, less sappy books. If you like Chicken Soup for the Pet Lover's Soul, then this one may be more up your alley.



5 out of 5 stars Will Haunt You and Delight You Both at the Same Time   May 12, 2008
The Story opens tense and the suspense builds through to the climax. Right from the get go we see Amy Redwing, rescuer of Golden Retrievers, in trouble and she and her beau Brian McCarthy approach the home of mean tequila drunk Carl Brockman. Not only does Brockman treat his dog Nickie like a dormat, but he treats his wife and kids that way as well.

Amy gets right into Brockman's space, but instead of bullying him out of the dog, she buys him for two thousand dollars, then drops a dime on Brockman. At home with Nickie it doesn't take long before Amy, her two Goldens, Fred and Ethel and Brian too, to realize Nickie is special and rather than adopt him out, Amy decides to keep him.

And things start happening. Lights go on and off, Brian can't stop drawing the dog, especially his eyes, someone starts following Amy and someone very bad wants her dead and employs some horrible people to do his bidding. And there is more, both Amy and Brian have troubled pasts and secrets that will be revealed as you pour through this book that you won't be able to stop reading. And just who or what is Nickie? Gotta read it through to find out, but don't worry, every word in this book is worth it.

Jack Priest, author of Ragged Man, Gecko & Night Witch.



4 out of 5 stars Darkest Evening of the Year   May 10, 2008
How can you not love this book? Dean Koontz as the author and a dog as the main character. The first Dean Koontz book I ever read was Watchers - I was forever hooked. This one just brought me full circle. You haven't lost a thing, Dean. In loving memory of Trixie, dog.


3 out of 5 stars Roller coaster ride of emotions?   May 2, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

As I begin every review - spoilers ahead.

First of the good, I liked the way all the characters were connected. On more than one occasion I was wondering how it was going to come together, because Koontz always brings things together. There's never one red herring in the bunch. I liked the way it appeared that Vanessa was in charge of the psycho group when all along it had been Harrow. Yeah! Happy!

Yes, I'm an animal lover and if I could save them all I would, but that's not possible Reading a story of someone who saves them is a good thing. Another yeah! Happy!

Now of the bad...

The villains were taken care of way too easily in my opinion. Psycho #1 kills psycho #2, just in time for psycho #3 to take out psycho #2. How many psychos were there anyway? ** rhetorical question ** Not so yeah... not really happy.

Climatic ending? Not so much. It kind of lost steam after Amy followed behind the Expedition in the fog surprising the hitman/psycho and taking him out before he could do any harm. Huh? Boo!

Vanessa was taken out too quickly as well. There was NO interaction between her and Amy or her and Brian. I wanted something! And Michael walks into the room and BAM! He's out of the picture as well. So much for an interaction between him and Amy. Very big boo!

When you build these types of back stories between characters throughout an entire book, more or less, you want payoff when they meet face-to-face. You want dialogue. You want, "I've waited a long time for this moment" or "I should've known you'd be back", but I got nothing. Nada. Zip. Zilch. Very disappointing.

Spiritual is all well and good, and maybe I missed something, but the 'we're-dead-no-we're-not-the-angel-dog-saved-us" left me feeling kind of wanting.

All in all, the ending could have been and should have been a little more exciting. Closure! I need action and closure. Showing and not telling. And an angel dog who flies with a child attached to its collar and then resurrects the dead? Maybe if there were more hints to Nickie's special powers along the way, but I just couldn't buy into it. I'm sorry.

Oh, and I'm pretty sure I could have done without how cruel people can be to animals. And how atrocious puppy mills are. I know this. It pains me, but I don't need that much detail when I'm reading a work of fiction.

Dean Koontz ranks right up there with my favorite authors. Top three and I read a lot! And like everyone else Watchers, and Strangers, are my favorites. I like Odd, too.

Constructive criticism is a good thing, right?

My rating was a three because the overall story did not suck on any level, but the ending kind of did.


Powered by Associate-O-Matic

Contact Wolverine Books