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5 Reviews
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Above-average early stuff,
By
This review is from: After the Last Race (Hardcover)
Dean Koontz, After the Last Race (Fawcett Crest, 1974)availability: bookfinder.com Well, if you're going to write genre novels, you might This is one of the longest novels Koontz wrote before This may well be the hardest Dean Koontz novel on the
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
early writings,
By A Customer
This review is from: After the Last Race (Hardcover)
For all you regular Dean Koontz fans who don't recognize this title, it is because it was one of his very early books. Originally published back in 1974! That may be the reason some people might not enjoy this writing.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Very different from newer Koontz,
By A Customer
This review is from: After the Last Race (Hardcover)
This book starts out slow, but picks up toward the end. It is very un-Koontz-like. It's not a horror or even a suspense novel. If you're a Koontz fan you may want to read it just to say you've read it.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Horrible book!,
By A Customer
This review is from: After the Last Race (Hardcover)
By far Koontz's worst book! Unless you are one of those fans who has to read everything that he's wrote, don't waste your money. Instead spend it on his IMHO best book Strangers.
2.0 out of 5 stars
Historic Koontz,
By
This review is from: After the Last Race (Hardcover)
This novel seems to have been written between Koontz's early science fiction works and his best sellers of the past 20 years. He seems to have wanted to try his hand at writing an Arthur Hailey-type story: bringing in lots of divergent characters, each with their own unique backgrounds, that come to a confluence at the end of the book.
As others have pointed out, this book gets off to an extremely slow start. Koontz seems to be trying for a "Mission Impossible" format showing bits and pieces of a master plan that become apparent later in the story. It is a good idea but his writing in the first part of the book was not up to whatever it takes to keep up the reader's interest. This improved later in the story but then another flaw in my opinion becomes apparent: I did not especially like any of his characters. For that matter, there was no character that was extremely "bad", either. There was one character that the reader might have rooted for in the beginning but when that character was willing to "shoot to kill" anybody that got in the way of money that he wanted to steal, I lost did not care whether that character survived to the end of the story or not. One of the thieves was portrayed as being the "bad guy" of the story as he was planning on killing all of his fellow thieves in order to have all of the booty to himself. But the others were willing to kill guards, police, or even a civic-minded civilian to get this same money so his behavior was not much worse than the rest of the gang. I would not recommend this book to anybody. I am kind of glad that I read it but that is for historical purposes only. (It is interesting to see the development of a writer.) |
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After the Last Race by Dean Koontz (Paperback - 1975)
Used & New from: $29.99
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