Lightning
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Product Description
A bolt of lightning brings a blond-haired weirder into Laura Shane’s life. But is he the guardian angel he seems? The devil in disguise? Or the master of a haunting destiny beyond time and space?
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I read 2 books of this leader and didn’t like any of them. This book is so unreal. I know that it was supposed to be sci-fi but it’s so stupid. I do not recommend this book to anyone.
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
stupid characters [Note for Mr. Koontz]Since you have never come up with a excellent by yourself,why don’t you throw in the bloody towel? 1 star.
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
Listening to this book on tape was even more painful than reading it because of the sham slavic accents. Koontz permanently lacks appealing characterization & any flair in his prose, and this time he also lacks an original tale. “Ho-hum…” and “Who gives a excellent goddamn?” flittered through my mind as this inane rip-off of a tale prattled on. Worse than listening to your best friend clarify the minute fluctuations in her terrible relationship.
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
Koontz should be forced to pay royalities on the plots that he has stolen over the years. Doesn’t this guy have an original thought in his head. I had high hopes for him after I read Watchers. I thought that he was the next Stephen King. Boy was I incorrect. With each book since Watchers he has stolen more and more from competent authors and this one takes the cake.
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
From the first few chapters of this book, I was shocked that it was required reading for my SciFi/Fantasy class. Laura — a too-perfect, gorgeous, wise-beyond-her-years heroine — is place through all the terrible trials of an uninspired romance novel: death of one parent, then the next, a cruel orphanage with a leering pedophile, a neglectful foster home, a near rape and murder… These occurences come one right after the additional in the first hundred pages of the novel, and near the end I was starting to marvel if next poor Laura would be sold into slavery in Thailand and lose her limbs to leprosy, all the while dispensing wisdom and determined to persevere. Koontz nearly highlights the ridiculousness of this when Laura is forced to see a counselor after an incident, and he is baffled when she primly clarifies that, well, life goes on.
Around page 95, the book does a hairpin turn. Suddenly, the clouds are gone! She is a pleased college student with a budding writing career! She meets the man of her dreams! They marry! He waxes poetic on her “inner beauty” bright through her work! Her books are published, get on the NYTimes bestseller’s list for weeks, get movies made out of them. They have a child, they make a million dollars. Now I expected Laura to win the lottery and ride off on a unicorn, but of course the thought is to set up as much unrealistic euphoria that it makes the next threatening situation seem worse than anything that came before. But, all this does is make the plot predictable.
I won’t go into detail on anything else. Koontz’s writing puts me off as much as his plot; his descriptions make me cringe and he not only beats us over the head with recurring themes and symbolism, but occasionally clarifies in literal terms the significance of his symbols.
If you read his for anything, read it for a groan and a laugh. If you are intrigued by the axiom, “time-traveling Nazis”, then this book may be for you.
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5