Home :: Books :: Audiocassettes  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes

Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
One Door Away From Heaven

One Door Away From Heaven

List Price: $44.95
Your Price: $28.32
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 .. 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 .. 22 >>

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Waste of money, waste of time.
Review: This is the first book I've read by Dean Koontz...and it will definitely be my last.

I expected a somewhat intelligent science fiction thriller, but I should have known by some of the previous reviews and the humorous quotes introducing the novel that I was way off-base.

I still can't figure out what Koontz's intention was in writing "One Door Away From Heaven". Eccentric caricatures instead of characters, unbelievable and repetitive situations, bad use of English...and a psychic dog! Is it supposed to be a spoof? Was it intended for not-too-bright youngsters, maybe as an ugly sci-fi cousin to "Harry Potter"? No matter what way you look at it, it's a ludicrous endeavor, and about 300 pages longer than necessary to hold its multiple, slender plot-lines.

Valuable lesson learned: read ALL those Amazon.com reader reviews before buying!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Sweet read
Review: I loved this book. It is sensitive, thoughtful, deeply personal, and opinionated. The word choice and poetic narrative give the book an emotional color that can be in turns heart-wrenching, comic, suspenseful, and mysterious. It's not necessarily a read for people who take a harder-edged view of life. If there is some heavy-handedness in the final message, I feel it was earned. Plot holes . . . I saw them, and I didn't care. Koontz wrote his heart out.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: High-velocity Koontz
Review: A boy (?), a dog, great female heroes, a private eye, a memorable villain, and a terrific philosophical, passionate message make this novel as good as anything Dean Koontz has ever written. He's still got it!!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: If you are looking for depth in this book, don't bother....
Review: Of course, like everyone else, I love Koontz. I have enjoyed the spirituality of his more recent books and was looking forward to a thought provoking read, but I hated this book. Each and every character was either too good (Curtis, Old Yeller, Leilani, Aunt Gen, the Twins, the Senator's wife) or too bad (Maddoc, Leilani's Mom, the Senator, Bad Aliens, Bad FBI, the mercy killing nurse). The only characters even halfway believeable were Noah and Micky. I can't even begin to describe how frustrated the huge, gaping plot holes left me. Aliens learning about us by watching movies for heavens sake, could there be any more overused cliche.
On a more serious note it seems to me that Koontz overlooked his chance to take a deeper look at bio-ethics, a subject he obviously feels strongly about. By contrasting Leilani's and Noah's sister's predicaments and the resources our society is willing to spend on one and not the other, plus the impact they have on the families involved, he could have tackled some of the tricky situations involved. I would have enjoyed an intelligent discussion... oh well....

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Strange, overwritten, and way too long!
Review: I nearly gave up on this book after 200 pages, and then finally the plot started kicking in. I'm glad I hung in with it, but overall, just an average book and definitely not Koontz' best. (Try From the Corner of His Eye and Sole Survivor for great Koontz reads!) The characters are fascinating, and the plot is interesting once the author gets over his "simile/metaphor-itis" and gets down to storytelling. It's obviously an attempt at a different kind of style, and instead of being amusing which is the intent, it's just plain obnoxious after awhile. An example from Chapter 10 - "Eighteen-wheelers loaded with everything from spools of abb to zymometers, reefer semis hauling ice cream or meat, cheese or frozen dinners, flatbeds laden with concrete pipe and construction steel and railroad ties, automobile transports, slat-sided trailers carrying livestock, tankers full of gasoline, chemicals: Scores of mammoth rigs, headlights doused but cab-roof lights and marker lights colorfully aglow, encircle the pump islands in much the way that nibbling stegosaurs and grazing brontosauruses and packs of hunting theropods had eons ago circled too close to the treacherous bogs that swallowed them by the thousands, by the millions." Oh brother. Is Koontz trying to write like Michael Chabon?? Give me a break! Another example from Chapter 19, "Leilani could detect that dangerous inclination more reliably than the most talented fungi-hunting pig could locate buried truffles,..." Yawn and eye roll. It is a testament to how much I enjoyed Koontz' other books, that I hung on with this one and completed it at all. Chop out the extra 200 pages worth of silly literary devices, and there's a decent plot here.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very Fantastic Book
Review: This is close to the best of Koontz! Seize the Night my favorite. But One Door Away From Heaven keeps you turning the pages, keeps you guessing, there is everything in this book. I love the humor Mr. Koontz puts in the middle of incredible drama.
He uses beautiful descriptions and much pathos in some sections. A very enjoyable piece of literature. I hope he writes till he's 100!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Masterpiece!...This novel has it all!! Thanks Dean!
Review: This novel is the absolute best of Dean Koontz! The story is plausible, and the characters are very defined.This is not however, a "monster" story as "Phantoms", and the like. It's a story of a very loveable little girl, who has the wrong type of mother, and a terrifying stepfather who is the "monster" in this
tale. I'd like to personally thank Mr.Koontz for this great read!I have to admit,though, that my Golden Retriever "Jodi" thought that Curtis's dog, "Old Yeller", was the hero of the story.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Imaginative and Different
Review: Overall, I thought the book was very good. The story was unique and interesting. The characters were well-developed. It was sad to read about the little girl's home situation, because so many children do have unfit parents in real life. In fact, the book's plot can be described as an interesting combination of fantasy and reality. The ending was somewhat idealistic, but I guess it had to be after such a depressing lead up. The bioethics theory profiled in the book is very scary, as there are people who actually think that way. Hitler was one of them. In summary, the book is definitely worth reading. Koontz is an extremely gifted writer. Even his bad stuff is good, and this is one of his better novels.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Loved How I Started, HATED the Ending
Review: While "One Door Away From Heaven" is fascinating, from the beginning, I knew exactly where the plot was going (whether I've just read too many Dean Koontz novels or the plot is tired is up to you to decide). The plot incorporates three different stories and ties them all together... strangely. However, it seemed to me that anyone reading of "the motherless boy" a.k.a. Curtis and his escapes from his mother's killers' brutality would easily tie to abused, neglected and disabled Leilani. Why the incorporation of so many children in this one?

Then there's the plot of Michelina Bellsong, abused as a young girl. Her sudden revelation seems unlikely (even if small). The incorporation of her character is understandable, I suppose, but seems somewhat unnecessary.

As miracles go, the one of Extra Terrestrials is to be used only sparingly. This book seems overly padded and underly interesting, of course I never was a fan of sci-fi. While it does offer an exciting plot, I prefer my books a little more realistic.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: ONE DOOR AWAY FROM MEDIOCRITY
Review: Having read almost all of Mr. Koontz's works, this one comes as quite a disappointment. And the main reason is the superfluous, redundancy of his prose. Good Lord, Dean, as one reviewer noted, why in the world did you litter this book with so much unnecessary description and philosophizing? You've done it before, but this time, you've really overdone it! There's one passage in which he describes a sunset that is so overwrought, I burst out laughing at the imagery. So, Dean, please remember your books are meant to entertain, not teach poetic English or convert readers to a strange, if pleasant, philosophy. Now, as far as the book and its plot, Dean interweaves many of his past motifs into a sometimes incoherent, although intriguing, storyline. My favorite character was Noah Farrel, and I'm not really sure, but I guess because he seemed so tragic and had such a deep love for his sister, he came across a little more credibly. In his Curtis Hammond plot, Dean does manage some very funny dialogue. But, how many more superdogs is Dean going to give us? And it's fairly obvious early on who Curtis really is. The way all of the characters get together is pretty far-fetched, but I'll abide by the standard of creative license. The characters of the twins, Polly and Cassie, are great, and I really enjoyed them, too. The ending is so "Mary Poppinish", it almost smells of a series?
Well, Koontz fans, I'm sure we'll stick with him, but I hope the bougainvillea suffer drought, and Dean returns to thrilling, instead of frustrating us!


<< 1 .. 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 .. 22 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates