Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Dean Koontz may be a master of suspense, but he holds nothing back when naming books he’d recommend by other authors. In a post ...
Dean Koontz may be a master of suspense, but he holds nothing back when naming books he’d recommend by other authors. In a post shared to social media, the New York Times bestselling author gives his ...
The author, most recently, of “The City” is a fan of Marilynne Robinson and Cormac McCarthy: “Both offer voluptuous yet highly controlled language and profound moral purpose.” New books by Wally Lamb, ...
Alyssa Avina is a writer and model in Virginia. Born and raised in Southern California, when she isn't building a community for body positivity, she is losing herself in far off worlds both on the big ...
A cinematic obsessive with the filmic palate of a starving raccoon, Rob London will watch pretty much anything once. With a mind like a steel trap, he's an endless fount of movie and TV trivia, borne ...
Dean Koontz, the prolific master of suspense, calls his new book, “The Bad Weather Friend,” one of his favorites. Most authors favor their new work. But Dean Koontz isn’t most authors. He’s written ...
Good morning, and welcome to the L.A. Times Book Club newsletter. A turbulent flight turned Dean Koontz off flying decades ago. No problem: His imagination does all the soaring he needs to create the ...
IRVINE, Calif. - Few American writers sell as many books, live better or worry more than Dean Koontz. "There are days that you think, 'I can't do this anymore,'" says Koontz, 77, author of more than ...
It’s hard not to binge read a Dean Koontz novel. Koontz’s prose is beyond tight. His suspenseful plots hurl readers headlong into raucous adventures in which the stakes for his protagonists are ...
"The House at the End of the World" by Dean Koontz (Thomas & Mercer) Like the "fusions" that terrify the main characters, Dean Koontz's new thriller feels not quite fully formed. It starts as a ...
Like the “fusions” that terrify the main characters, Dean Koontz’s new thriller feels not quite fully formed. It starts as a mystery — what sort of dangerous experiments is the U.S. government ...