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Dean Ray Koontz, born July 9, 1945 in Everett, Pennsylvania, is a fiction author. He grew up in desperate poverty under the tyranny of a violent alcoholic father (Koontz's father served time in prison for trying to murder Koontz). Despite his childhood, he put himself through university and in 1967 he worked as an English teacher at Mechanicsburg High School where in his spare time he wrote his first novel, Star Quest, which was published in 1968. From there he went on to write over a dozen more science fiction novels. In the 1970s, he began publishing mainstream suspense and horror fiction, under his own name as well as pseudonyms; Koontz has stated he used pen names after several editors convinced him that authors who switched genre fell victim to negative crossover. Known pseudonyms include Deanne Dwyer, K. R. Dwyer, Aaron Wolfe, David Axton, Brian Coffey, John Hill, Leigh Nichols, Owen West, and Richard Paige. Currently some of those novels are sold under Koontz's real name. Koontz's breakthrough novel was Whispers (1980). Several of his books have reached #1 on the New York Times bestseller list. He is renowned for his skill at writing suspense. His strengths also include memorable characters, original ideas, and ability to blend horror, fantasy and humour. Koontz has been criticized for his tendency to include too many similes and therefore to drag out descriptions, his frequent use of similar plotting structures, and a tendency to moralize heavily. Koontz also has a very interesting way of adding his own little quirks...such as adding simple quotes from a book by the name of The Book of Counted Sorrows. The Book of Counted Sorrows was originally a hoax, like the nonexistent Keener's Manual Richard Condon cited for epigraphs he wrote himself. Eventually Koontz put together a poetry collection of that name, using all the epigraphs; it was printed as a limited edition in 2003. His two most recent novels, though, The Taking and Life Expectancy, have no verse by Koontz; rather, they have quotes by other authors (in particular, The Taking uses quotes from T. S. Eliot, whose works figure in the plot of the novel. Koontz has long been a fan of Art Bell's radio program. He appeared as a guest after a fan reported to Bell that one of Koontz' novels featured a character describing a paranormal event as an "Art Bell moment." Koontz currently resides in Southern California, where most of his novels are set, with his wife Gerda and their dog Trixie Koontz. Partial bibliography
External links
de:Dean Koontz eo:Dean R. KOONTZ ru:Кунц, Дин sv:Dean R. Koontz |
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