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Rating: Summary: A TREAT Review: Having penned scads of novels under his name (and not) over the last two decades, Andrew Neiderman is undoubtedly in a class of his own. Year after year he manages to satisfy his readers by creating original unputdownable page-turners like PIN, IMP, BABY SQUAD. When not so original, his novels are still a treat, if not for their fast-paced reads, for the skillful way Neiderman creates his own take on the subject, such as in the case of NIGHT HOWL, the story of a laboratory man-made German shepherd on the loose and the people chasing it.A reminiscence of Steve King's CUJO (where a viscous dog is attacking a woman and her son) and of Dean Koontz's WATCHERS (centered around a dog and its pursuers), NIGHT HOWL mostly delivers when Neiderman gets rid of his first third cliché-ridden plot. Then it becomes a roller-coaster thrill ride where the hunters are becoming the hunted, the enemies are not what they appear to be and the creature's itinerary to freedom is taking him--and us--to undiscovered places. The author's philosophical vision of the dog's journey even adds sparks to it all. Just like a good grade-B novel, NIGHT HOWL succeeds what it's set out to do : entertain its readers. It is a well constructed, if sometimes stereotypical, piece of suspenseful fluff. -----------Martin Boucher
Rating: Summary: howl in despair Review: so there's this dog-creature going round thinking evil thoughts. it will punish the humans, yes it will. it lurks, it stalks, it even comes to bite a human and then disappear again. then it wants to punish other humans. this was really uninteresting, stereotypical, dull. bad plot. just a lot of evil thoughts and nothing much going on. a creature walking around thinking evil thoughts, sometimes attacking? what was the author thinking? there is no reason to buy this book, no matter what taste you have in books, you won't be satisfied anyway.
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