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Relentless [With Earbuds] (Playaway Adult Fiction)
 
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Relentless [With Earbuds] (Playaway Adult Fiction) [Preloaded Digital Audio Player]

Dean R. Koontz (Author), John Miller (Narrator)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (258 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 2009 Playaway Adult Fiction
Literary critic Shearman Waxx can kill a good book with just a few acidly worded bon mots. And as one unlucky author is about to discover, that’s not all he’s prepared to kill. . . .

From #1 New York Times bestselling master of suspense Dean Koontz comes a mesmerizing thriller about the battle of wills that ensues when a successful author and likable family man confronts a reclusive sociopath who wields an all-too-deadly poison pen. Respect Shearman Waxx’s opinion and you might escape with your career intact. Cross him and he’ll destroy you, your family, and everything you hold dear. For the title “America’s most feared critic” isn’t one Waxx takes lightly. He takes it literally. And now Cubby Greenwich, his wife, Penny, their brilliant six-year-old Milo, and their uniquely talented non-collie, Lassie, are all about to learn the true meaning of “culture war.”
--This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

A bad book review propels this farcical thriller from bestseller Koontz (Your Heart Belongs to Me). Bestselling author Cullen Cubby Greenwich is mortified when Shearman Waxx, the nation's premier literary critic, savages his work. Cubby manages to find the syphilitic swine at Roxie's Bistro in Newport Beach, Calif., where the author's six-year-old prodigy son nearly pees by accident on Waxx in the restaurant's men's room. In retaliation, Waxx threatens Cubby with doom and gets things started nicely by blowing up his house. With almost superhuman ease, the book critic keeps track of Cubby and his family as they flee for their lives. While some may take this as satire, the over-the-top villain's underdeveloped motivation and a jokey narrative tone that jars when juxtaposed with terrifying scenes of violence will leave others scratching their heads. By the time Koontz introduces a science fiction element, a lot of readers may have already checked out. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review

"Koontz is a master of the edge-of-your-seat, paranoid thriller and perhaps the leading American practitioner of the form."—Newark Star-Ledger

"Koontz is working at his pinnacle, providing terrific entertainment that deals seriously with some of the deepest themes of human existence: the nature of evil, the grip of fate and the power of love."—Publishers Weekly, Starred Review

"Koontz has always had near-Dickensian powers of description, and an ability to yank us from one page to the next that few novelists can match." —Los Angeles Times

“An exquisite crafting of the thrilling, the unexplainable, and the personal, with the mirth and whimsy that Koontz throws in seemingly effortlessly just when it's most needed and least expected.”—Library Journal, starred review

“[A] smoothly spun nail-biter.... Koontz still grabs readers as few other thriller scribes can.”—Booklist


From the Hardcover edition. --This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Preloaded Digital Audio Player
  • Publisher: Playaway (June 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1608475522
  • ISBN-13: 978-1608475520
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 4.6 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (258 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #7,120,589 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I was born and raised in Pennsylvania where I graduated from Shippensburg State College (now Shippensburg University). When I was a senior in college, I won an Atlantic Monthly fiction competition and have been writing ever since. My first job after graduation was with the Appalachian Poverty Program, where I was expected to counsel and tutor underprivileged children on a one-to-one basis. During my first day on the job, I discovered that the previous occupier of my position had been beaten up by the very kids he had been trying to help and had landed in the hospital for several weeks. The following year was filled with challenge but also tension, and I was more highly motivated than ever to build a career as a writer. I wrote nights and weekends, which I continued to do after leaving the poverty program and going to work as an English teacher in a suburban school district outside Harrisburg. After a year and a half in that position, my wife, Gerda, made me an offer I couldn't refuse: "I'll support you for five years," she said, "and if you can't make it as a writer in that time, you'll never make it." By the end of those five years, Gerda had quit her job to run the business end of my writing career. Gerda and I, along with our dog, Trixie, live in southern California.

 

Customer Reviews

258 Reviews
5 star:
 (69)
4 star:
 (52)
3 star:
 (50)
2 star:
 (41)
1 star:
 (46)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (258 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

164 of 188 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely Relentless, June 10, 2009
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This review is from: Relentless: A Novel (Hardcover)
Koontz's newest book reminds me of his early stuff. After the last few books, I was feeling really tepid toward Koontz. His writing used to be predictable- always a thriller with a twist and great characterization. His more recent work has tasted a bit flat to me- almost as if he was trying to be contemplative and instead coming off sophomoric. Earlier books were very entertaining and always interesting, not necessarily fantastic literature but very adroit at entertaining the reader and hard to put down.

When I first started reading "Relentless", I thought, "Here we go again." We are introduced to the sweet but goofy Cubby who, coincidentally, is a writer. His wife, Penny, is the tough and capable daughter of survivalists and author of children's books featuring a rabbit with big ears. They, of course, have a child who is, at the tender age of six, a genius of the highest degree and currently working on a project he is unable to even begin to explain to his dad. They have a very lovable dog who also seems to be very special.

Cubby and family are plunged into a nightmare when the infamous Shearman Waxx, reclusive book critic, reviews Cubby's recently released book and skewers it. Despite Penny's warnings to "let it go", Cubby just can't. When he finds out that the reviewer frequents a restaurant where he and his family dine, he goes to lunch hoping to check the guy out. A brief encounter in the restaurant bathroom soon has Cubby wishing he'd followed his wife's advice.

Catastrophe ensues and Cubby and his litttle family are soon on the run from absolute evil of mythical proportions that seems to have practically supernatural resources.

Waxx makes for quite the sinister boogeyman and despite my initial misgivings, Cubby, his wife and kid and the group of eccentric family and friends that aid their flight and search for answers in a race to save their lives, turn out to be quite endearing. They have no idea what's coming for them and they must keep on the move and their wits about them to avoid, not just death- but a terrible one.

Koontz injects a hefty dose of what appears to be his light-up-the-darkness philosophy into the book. Cubby, despite his goofiness and mechanical ineptitude, has a dark secret in his past that makes his comedic and wonder-filled contribution to the literary world all the more amazing given what he has overcome.

An easy read- the time will fly by(read this straight through). Once past the initial chapters, the thriller aspect grabbed me and held me. Koontz likes to leave his reader hanging at the end of the chapter- something major just happened but nope, you're not going to find out until you readd the next chapter. So, if you aren't going to read it straight through, I imagine it would be fun to jump back into it with a new chapter.

Koontz does a good job developing his characters which is ultimately very necessary to suspend disbelief because some very unbelievable things take place in this book and even some of the characters are a tad far-fetched. I so enjoyed his characters, though, that I willed them into the realm of possibly existing in my mind.

If you are a fan of the Koontz thrillers(Lightning, Watchers, Phantoms) you will enjoy this. If you are new to Koontz, I highly recommend those titles I've mentioned. This book has some good suspense(a la Robert Ludlum) and a twist of the unexpected(Stephen King lite). The book does contain several scenes that describe graphic murder scenes which are a bit disturbing. The message of the book, overall, however, is a very positive one(Koontz does get a little heavy-handed with preaching his world view but it does not detract from the overall storyline).

Koontz makes no small show of telling us that we should hang on to our senses of humor, love and moments of grace despite the murder, mayhem and madness of the world and thus we keep the darkness at bay and good wins out over evil.
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105 of 122 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars What the Heck Has Happened to Dean Koontz?, July 22, 2009
By 
This review is from: Relentless: A Novel (Hardcover)
Dean Koontz has changed, and not for the better.

OK, I'm a Koontz fan from way back. I've read all of the Koontz novels, including most of the Brian Coffey, Leigh Nichols, and Owen West stuff. I've re-read my favorites (Watchers, Whispers, Lightning, Strangers, The Bad Place) over and over. Lately, though....

Let's start at the beginning. Koontz's characters used to be normal people, for the most part. Often they were wealthy, which allowed the story to progress outside of a 9-to-5 job. But they were still ordinary. In Watchers, the protagonists are a retired real estate agent and a terminally shy hermit. In Whispers, they are both cops. In Phantoms, she's a doctor and he's the county sheriff who responds to her distress call. In Strangers there is a couple who own a motel, the couple who run the attached restaurant, a two-bit author and college professor, a doctor, a cocktail waitress, and a priest. In The Bad Place, they run a detective agency. These are ordinary people.

Recently, Koontz's characters have been larger than life. Whether it was Odd Thomas and his necromancy or the only one of many to walk away from a military rescue mission in The Husband, his characters are superlative. In making them so, Koontz renders them boring and two-dimensional.

In the beginning, Relentless looks like a return to the earlier characters of depth, but sorry, they aren't. The story focuses on a family. The family consists of a fabulously successful author, his fabulously successful children's book author wife, a child of startling genius, and a dog with apparently odd powers. Here's a clue, Dean. While we aren't ancient Greeks, and it's rare that a story directly involves the will of the gods, having a character who invents amazing devices that produce unexplainable phenomena is the modern version of Deus ex machina. And it's just as lame in its modern form.

Everyone in this book is more suited to a comic book than a novel. The villains are extra villain-y. The good guys are extra good. And everyone has a little quirk blown up to all proportions. The wife's parents can't be ordinary people. They are survivalist demolition experts who spend most of their life in an underground bunker living without power tools because after the fall of humanity, there won't be electrical power. (So you should suffer now? Use power tools as long as you can and stock hand tools if necessary.)

Second, if you read Your Heart Belongs to Me, or if you read some of the criticism of it, you will know that Koontz's last book wasn't well received. So when the antagonist in this book is a book critic who gives our "hero" a terrible review, it comes across as a passive-aggressive knock to the author's critics. "The people who say my last book was terrible aren't honestly expressing displeasure. They're part of a vast, worldwide conspiracy to corrupt humanity by removing beauty and sources of awe." Puh-lease!

Third, this isn't the first vast-enormous-evil-conspiracy book Koontz has written, and it's getting old. Most evil in the real world is perpetrated by individuals. And it's really disturbing that someone who has had so many authority-as-heroes in his earlier books (the protagonists in Whispers, the sheriff and most of the deputies in Phantoms, the cop and NSA agent in Watchers) that it's sort of disturbing that he can say a whole town council and the police agency for the area are entirely corrupted without expressing some horror over it.

Finally, Koontz seems to have lost the ability to change tone between books. There are spots, especially in the description of the restaurant, when Koontz seems to be narrating in Odd Thomas's voice. I don't particularly like the Odd Thomas series, so it's very apparent. It's another sign that Koontz is writing too fast and relying on his expertise as a writer rather than paying attention to his craft.

All in all, I was very disappointed. I notice that Koontz has two other books due out this year. I wonder if he simply trying to do too much and not taking the time to review his work, create believable characters, and flesh out his plots.
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36 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars The Worst Koontz Yet, August 25, 2009
By 
Jason McNutt (Baltimore, MD United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Relentless: A Novel (Hardcover)
Like many of the other readers who have reviewed the book, I also had high hopes for the latest Dean Koontz book. I picked up the audio version at the library in preparation for a long vacation drive, only to have my high hopes wither CD by CD. My advice is to avoid this book and if you do feel compelled to patronize Mr. Koontz, I would suggest the written version from the library.

Top 5 Reasons to avoid this book:
5) For a thriller, there was no suspense
4) The characters are ridiculously unbelievable (especially the dialog)
3) The prose is so verbose you want to pull your hair out
2) Cubby's character is so annoyingly incompetent you'd prefer he's knocked off at the beginning
1) Koontz must have got tired of the book because he phones in the ending

After this, it will be a while before I get excited by another new Dean Koontz and thanks be to the public library.
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