Amazon Exclusive Essay: Destiny and Odd Hours Odd Thomas came to me as a gift, the entire first chapter of his first book having poured out of me as I was in the middle of writing
The Face. I wrote it by hand, though I never work that way, and I never hesitated to think what should come next. He was fully-realized in my mind from the moment I began to write in that lined legal tablet. With other stories and characters, I can identify the source of the inspiration, but not with Oddie and his books. He just suddenly was. When I write about him, his narrative voice is so clear to me that I almost hear him in my head.
For those among you who long have thought that I should be institutionalized, just relax: I said I almost hear him.
Many times over the years, I said I would never write an open-ended series. Then along came Oddie, and he proved me wrong. Or so I thought. As I wrote the first chapter of
Odd Hours, the fourth featuring my fry-cook hero, I realized that this was not an open-ended series, after all, but that it would conclude with six or seven novels. I now think seven.
I suddenly saw the end point of his journey, the arc of it to the final book, and I was stunned. Beginning with this fourth story, the stakes were being raised dramatically; Oddie was going to face far more physical and moral danger than previously; and he was going to mature toward the fulfillment of a destiny that I had not seen coming until that moment.
Initially, I tried to argue myself out of the direction that
Odd Hours was taking. I didn't believe that the first three books had put down a sufficient foundation to support the formidable architecture that I saw rising from it in the next three or four novels.
When I began to reread the first three books, however, I quickly discovered that I had unconsciously paved the road that the series was now taking. I had thought I was writing a series with an overall theme about the power and beauty of humility. Indeed I was, but it was also something more than that; and Oddie's ultimate destiny will not be merely purification to a state of absolute humility, but will be that and something else I find quite wonderful.
What lies ahead will be a challenge to write--or perhaps not. The character of Odd Thomas was a gift to me, and now I see that the entire architecture of a seven-book series was another gift that came to me complete on the same day Oddie arrived, although I needed time to recognize it.
This world is a place of wonder, and life is a mysterious enterprise; but nothing in all my years has been more mysterious than Odd Thomas's origins and my compulsion to write about him.
-- Dean Koontz
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Listeners who enjoyed Baker’s reading of Brother Odd, Forever Odd, and Odd Thomas (available from Books on Tape) will instantly recognize his inimitable voice and spot-on recitation of Odd Thomas’ exploits in this newest title in the stylish series. The unlikely hero finds himself privy to a plot to overthrow the government—and he is the only one who can stop the saboteurs. Koontz’s “Odd” novels combine elements of thrillers and the supernatural. Odd reads the future through “psychic magnetism” and possesses paranormal powers, but he is so modest and unpretentious that it is sometimes hard to appreciate that the fate of the world might be at stake. Baker plays to Odd’s distinctive voice, offering his familiar bons mots and observations in a matter-of-fact, conversational delivery. He lets listeners in on the joke as he expresses the mock-heroics in a tongue-in-cheek fashion. Engaging characters, smart dialogue, and a lighthearted yet philosophical tone mark this popular series. --Joyce Saricks