Kostenfreier Download , by Dean Koontz
Dieses Buch ist in Softcopy Daten angeboten, die von Ihnen zu haben ist. Überprüfen von Fans, haben viele Menschen die Analyseaufgabe dort am frühen Morgen Tag. Es ist, als der Weg, um den Tag zu beginnen. Irgendwann in ihrem Mittag, werden sie genießen zusätzlich die Veröffentlichung zu überprüfen. Haben Sie begonnen Führer zu mögen Check-out? , By Dean Koontz als eine der genannten Publikationen können Ihre Alternative zu investieren Ihre Zeit oder Freizeit speziell sein. Sie werden sicherlich nicht andere unnütze Aufgaben müssen die Zeit zu öffnen oder zu nutzen.
, by Dean Koontz
Kostenfreier Download , by Dean Koontz
Discovering ist ein Prozess, der von allen Personen in jedem Alter durchlaufen wird. In diesem Fall haben wir die Bücher immer, die gesammelt und Überprüfung werden müssen. , By Dean Koontz ist nur eine der Führungen, die wir für Sie in der Entdeckung immer beraten. Dies ist das Mittel, wie Sie rund um das Thema zu lernen. Wenn Sie die Sichtbarkeit von Führungen haben, sollten Sie nur sehen, wie dieses Buch tatsächlich zu empfehlen.
Produktinformation
Format: Kindle Ausgabe
Dateigröße: 4181 KB
Seitenzahl der Print-Ausgabe: 594 Seiten
Verlag: Headline (29. November 2012)
Verkauf durch: Amazon Media EU S.Ã r.l.
Sprache: Englisch
ASIN: B00A3BO82W
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Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung:
4.2 von 5 Sternen
35 Kundenrezensionen
Amazon Bestseller-Rang:
#87.818 Bezahlt in Kindle-Shop (Siehe Top 100 Bezahlt in Kindle-Shop)
I haven't read any Dean Koontz in quite a while but I'm very happy to have picked this one up. Sometimes the lead up to a climax event is a little long but Koontz has demonstrated his excellent style once again. A very worthwhile read.
Here's the typical Dean Koontz novel*: (1) an emotionally tortured, often widowed ex-military or ex-law enforcement guy (2) meets an equally emotionally damaged, often divorced or widowed woman (3) who together encounter Something Unusual (could be teleportation, alien encounters, time travel, or genetically engineered animals), and (4) in the course of understanding/unraveling the Something Unusual, heal each other.The two best variations on this formula are "Watchers" and "Dark Rivers of the Heart." To give away the Something Unusual here would take away too much fun, but suffice it to say that there's a psychotic government (?) assassin running loose with a license to kill, more or less.What distinguishes "Dark Rivers" is that the paranoid atmosphere Koontz generates is palpable, and exists even when you are reading chapters devoted to the assassin. Second, Koontz's writing really shines at parts; the first chapter -- go ahead, read it -- resonates with emotional depth; you really feel the loneliness and desperate hope of the hero. The sequence set in Utah with the assassin's ruminations on how to fit in with the Mormon police officers is unexpectedly (but no doubt intentionally) funny.While the book is not as explicitly violent as some of his other works ("Phantoms" and "Hideaway" come to mind), there are some disturbingly nasty scenes, particularly near the conclusion, so readers with weak stomachs should proceed cautiously.* Admittedly, the Moonlight Bay novels ("Fear Nothing" and "Seize the Night") have diverged a bit from this.
I normally don't like Dean Koontz, but I have to admit that this one was a pretty good read. The flashbacks really drew me into this book at first and kept my curiosity alive through the whole book, otherwise I might not have made it. The characters were above average by Koontz standards, although they still occasionally do some amazingly stupid things (which seems to be a Koontz trademark). In the very beginning of the book, the girl doesn't show up for the second date so Spencer decides to go break into her house??? Come on!! Koontz doesn't hold back at all on trying to make the government look bad. When talking about rebel groups that oppose the "Evil" US government, I couldn't help but think of those militia groups and cults that seem to be so popular these days. For anyone who knows a bit about computers, the technology and "hacking" in this book is not realistic at all, but then again it is a fiction book so I am not going to fault Koontz too much. The ending was very unrealistic. That would have really bothered me, but the flashbacks kept the book from fizzling out. Overall, a pretty enjoyable read.
Hmmm, reading through some of the reviews, I'm surprised at what people have had to say about Koontz and his writing. Sure, he's not for everybody, but he still has talent, and there are few writers that draw me in quite as completely as he does. Okay, enough of my ranting. I think Rivers is one of his better works. The characters achieve a greater depth than some in previous work, the flashbacks are well done, the government conspiracy is handled very well. Dean admits that the hacking in the book is not accurate, in a disclaimer at the end of the book, he says he shortened a lot of procedure for the sake of readability. Some of you are already complaining about the length...would you like him to add the detail back in so you have your accuracy and the rest of us end up bored silly? I would definitely recommend Dark Rivers to anyone who likes suspense or conspiracy stories. There's enough in here to keep you wondering for a while, and quite a few very unexpected surprises thrown in. (Just wait 'til you meet Godzilla!) While I wouldn't put Rivers in my top 5 Koontz novels of all time, it's pretty close, at least in the top 10.
Spencer Grant is a man with a dark past. He is a former Los Angelos police office who worked in the computer division but left, making sure to erase himself in many computer databases.He meets a woman in a bar (the waitress) and becomes curious when she doesn't show up for work the next day. He goes to her house (because he followed her home from work the previous evening unknown to her) and let's himself in. The place is cleared out and a picture of a cockroach is nailed to the wall. While looking around, a SWAT team enters the home and he barely escapes. Finding nothing in the paper that would explain why they were at her house, he decides to investigate her himself.Suspense is good but as the plot reveals itself it becomes way to complex. The middle and ending of the book read more like a movie script.I'm not into government coverups, etc. so this didn't turn out to be my cup of tea but I did like his writing style in this book. Each time Spencer had a flashback about his past he revealed a little more about himself and why he is so tormented. Works real well by itself -- he didn't need to through in the government and tie it all up in a bundle.
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