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Ride the Storm is the long-planned final book in the Moonlight Bay Trilogy, to be written by American author Dean Koontz.The book is the third installment featuring Christopher Snow, a young man who suffers from the rare (but real) disease called XP (xeroderma pigmentosum).
Trixie was a gift from CCI in gratitude of Koontz's substantial donations, totaling $2.5 million between 1991 and 2004. [20] Koontz was taken with the charity while he was researching his novel Midnight, a book which included a CCI-trained dog, a black Labrador Retriever, named Moose.
The Moonlight Bay Trilogy is an unfinished trilogy of three novels by Dean Koontz.They revolve around the mysterious events in Moonlight Bay, a fictitious Southern California town, that are investigated by the main character Christopher Snow, who suffers from the genetic disorder Xeroderma pigmentosum.
"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 ...
Watchers is a 1987 suspense novel by American author Dean Koontz. Along with Strangers , Lightning , and Midnight , Watchers is credited with establishing Koontz's status as a best-selling author .
77 Shadow Street is a New York Times Bestselling 2011 sci-fi horror novel by American author Dean Koontz, and his 101st novel. [1] The book was first released on December 27, 2011, through Bantam Books, and follows a diverse group of individuals living in an apartment building with a dark history of murder and mystery.
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.
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.