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Phantoms is a horror novel by American writer Dean Koontz, first published in 1983. The story is a version [ 1 ] [ 2 ] of the now-debunked [ 3 ] urban legend [ 4 ] involving a village mysteriously vanishing at Angikuni Lake .
"A Mouse in the Walls of the Global Village" (1972; in Again, Dangerous Visions; in the original Afterword, Koontz mentions having written Hung,"set in the hippie subculture of a small university", [4] which tried to show that Marshall McLuhan's concept of the global village was "on the right track" and that "our world was already being ...
A series of low-budget horror films was loosely based on the book. Watchers; Watchers II; Watchers III; Watchers Reborn; In the film adaptation Travis is a sixteen-year-old boy, and Nora is his mother. The Outsider is renamed OXCOM, and Vince Nasco is replaced by NSO agents searching for the monster.
What: Bestselling author Dean Koontz joins the L.A. Times Book Club to discuss “The Bad Weather Friend” with Times assistant managing editor Samantha Melbourneweaver. When: 1 p.m. Pacific Jan. 28
Phantoms is a 1998 American science fiction horror film directed by Joe Chappelle and starring Peter O'Toole, Rose McGowan, Joanna Going, Liev Schreiber, Ben Affleck, Nicky Katt, and Clifton Powell. The screenplay was adapted by Dean Koontz from his own 1983 novel of the same name .
Phantoms, a type of enemy in The Legend of Zelda video game series; Phantoms, a type of undead flying mob from the sandbox game Minecraft; The Phantom, the title given to a nameless spy who is the main villain of Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Dual Destinies; The Phantom (game system), a cancelled cloud-based video game console from 2004
Strange Highways is a collection of 12 short stories and two novels by American author Dean Koontz, released in May 1995. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Four of the stories are revised from their originals. A British edition of the book (without the novella Chase ) was previously issued by Headline in April 1995.
The Book of Counted Sorrows and The Book of Counted Joys are fictional books "quoted" as the source of various epigraphs in many of Dean Koontz's books. The books as cited sources do not actually exist; they are false documents. Koontz has since released a book under the same title, collecting the various epigraphs and adding additional material.