by Leigh Nichols
Shadowfires was firstly published by Leigh Nichols (one of
many Koontz’s pennames) in 1981. Before
starting publishing all his works under his real name, Koontz spent some years
using several pseudonyms depending on the type of thriller he wrote. Once his
popularity was acknowledged and solid he went on writing as Dean Koontz and
published his previous titles again with some polishing and little changes and
updates.
I love
horror books and thrillers written between the 70s and 80s. I have nothing against more recent prose, but
all those books in that span are for me… special. Shadowfires
fits with the style of the period and fulfilled all my expectation.
To tell you
the truth, when facing a book by this author my expectations are not high. But
on the other hand, he’s never disappointed me.
It’s something that never happens with any other writer. What do I mean
by this? Well, before turning the very first page I know that in that book
there will be a male and female characters who either met and fall in love with
each other along the vicissitudes of the story; or they are married and without
problems in paradise. Some books may include an extremely intelligent (Labrador)
dog in between. On the other hand, you have the bad guy who is… well, really
wicked. From page two, the happy couple is chased by the bad guy in a breathless
pursuit and for very different reasons. At the end of the story the good guys survive
and the bad ones bite the dust or eat the dirt sandwich.
If you’ve
got to this paragraph you may think I strongly dislike Koontz.
WRONG!
I love his
books because they deliver what I need at certain moments: action and entertainment. I also love his high quality prose, his
wonderful choice of words and his perfectly written sentences.
Shadowfires satisfied all my expectations and had all the
ingredients that I described above (no dog ths time, though.) It was that kind of book I needed the
moment I chose it.
This is classic Koontz and I recommend it to anyone
interested in reading non-stop thrillers. I would have given this novel 5 out
of 5 stars if the ending would have been a bit more elaborated. After more than
400 pages of pursuits, action and cliffhangers the conclusion and fate of the
characters come in no more than a couple of pages.
So if you
want a rating: 4 out of 5 stars.
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