"If you have to pay the bills, and you write something you're not proud of, use a pen-name for that." -- Dean Koontz
Dean Ray Koontz (born July 9, 1945) is an American author best known for his novels which could be described broadly as suspense thrillers. He also frequently incorporates elements of horror, science fiction, mystery, and satire. A number of his books have appeared on the New York Times Bestseller List, with ten hardcovers and fourteen paperbacks reaching the number one slot. Early in his career, Koontz wrote under an array of pen names, such as David Axton, Leonard Chris, and Brian Coffey.
"A fanatic is a nut who has something to believe in.""A politician's goal is always to manipulate public debate. I think there are some politicians with higher goals. But all of them get corrupted by power.""Although charismatic, James Dean is no Harrison Ford. In the majority of his movies, sooner or later he got the crap beaten out of him.""Although I've said a million times that I'm not a horror writer, I do like horror.""Because people see violence on the movie screen, they're not going to go out and hold up a liquor store and kill somebody. It really doesn't correlate.""Books were this wonderful escape for me because I could open a book and disappear into it, and that was the only way out of that house when I was a kid.""Civilization rests on the fact that most people do the right thing most of the time.""Each reader needs to bring his or her own mind and heart to the text.""Every book has some real life in it. I was never pursued by an evil twin clone, but everything else in MR. MURDER was pretty much out of my own life.""Human beings can always be relied upon to exert, with vigor, their God-given right to be stupid.""I believe that I was a dog in a past life. That's the only thing that would explain why I like to snack on Purina Dog Chow.""I do give books as gifts sometimes, when people would rather have one than a new Ferrari.""I don't find slashing and blood flying everywhere to be scary. I just find it repulsive.""I don't write a quick draft and then revise; instead, I work slowly page by page, revising and polishing.""I have avoided becoming stale by putting a little water on the plate, lying on the plate, and having myself refreshed in a toaster oven for 23 minutes once every month.""I have been reading Stephen King since CARRIE and hope to read him for many years to come.""I have to admit that when I watch a movie in which there is no moral context for the violence - I find that offensive. I think that's potentially damaging to society.""I like to deal with EVERY aspect of our condition, and that means terror and humor in equal mix. Some books have more room for humor than others.""I never discuss a novel while I'm writing it, for fear that talking about it will diminish my desire to write it.""I really believe that everyone has a talent, ability, or skill that he can mine to support himself and to succeed in life.""I receive about 10,000 letters a year from readers, and in the first year after a book is published, perhaps 5,000 letters will deal specifically with that piece of work.""I think it's perfectly just to refuse service to anyone based on behavior, but not based on race or religion.""I think it's the people who have no doubt that every word they put down is gold that probably don't write very well.""I think the world is full of evil people. I think in some ways we're in more danger now than before.""I try not to spend too much time on partisan politics. Life's too short for that. I don't really believe that there have been many human problems solved by politics.""I've got a long list of books I wish I'd never written-and I've kept them all out of print for the past 20 years.""I've not seen in my lifetime any politician who is a heroic figure. The manipulation that all politicians use on one level or another is so transparent.""If I drive myself to the brink of my ability, then I don't get stale or bored.""If someone wrote it and it had a peculiar twist, I've read it.""If something in your writing gives support to people in their lives, that's more than just entertainment-which is what we writers all struggle to do, to touch people.""If you want to publish two books a year under your own name and your publisher doesn't, maybe you need a different publisher.""In my books, I never portray violence as a reasonable solution to a problem. If the lead characters in the story are driven to it, it's at the extreme end of their experience.""In my personal life, I'm a comic novel. But then, so are we all, because we're human beings.""Like all of us in this storm between birth and death, I can wreak no great changes on the world, only small changes for the better, I hope, in the lives of those I love.""Literary fiction, as a strict genre, is all but dead. Meanwhile, most genres flourish.""My wife is my first audience. She's a tough lady, so I can't say that I ever scare her. Except, of course, when she sees me the way I look before breakfast.""Never, never try to scope the market.""Nothing gives us courage more readily than the desire to avoid looking like a damn fool.""One of the things I like enormously about Bob Weinstein is that that he's the only studio head I have ever known who will change his mind and say he was wrong.""Readers will stay with an author, no matter what the variations in style and genre, as long as they get that sense of story, of character, of empathetic involvement.""Some days I'm lucky to squeeze out a page of copy that pleases me, but I get as many as six or seven pages on a very good day; the average is probably three pages.""Somebody asked me about the current choice we're being given in the presidential election. I said, Well, it's like two of the scariest movies I can imagine.""Sometimes there is no darker place than our thoughts, the moonless midnight of the mind.""The hands of every clock are shears, trimming us away scrap by scrap, and every time piece with a digital readout blinks us towards implosion.""The only reason I would write a sequel is if I were struck by an idea that I felt to be equal to the original. Too many sequels diminish the original.""There's sometimes a weird benefit to having an alcoholic, violent father. He really motivated me in that I never wanted to be anything like him.""Vladimir Nabokov said the two great evils of the 20th century were Marx and Freud. He was absolutely correct.""We are coming out of a century that was taught that one way of looking at the world, that one form of behavior, is as valid as another. The idea of true evil has been blown away.""What we do as a society is seek simple answers.""When I'm working on a novel, I work 70-hour weeks.""When tempest tossed, embrace chaos.""Writing a novel is like making love, but it's also like having a tooth pulled. Pleasure and pain. Sometimes it's like making love while having a tooth pulled.""Your mind always does worse things than people can show in a movie."
Koontz was born on July 9, 1945, in Everett, Pennsylvania. He describes his youth as one of poverty under the abuse of a violent, drunk, skirt chasing father. He graduated from Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania in 1967, and soon after went to work as an English teacher at Mechanicsburg High School in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania.
In his spare time he wrote his first novel, Star Quest, which was published in 1968. Koontz went on to write over a dozen science fiction novels. Seeing the Catholic faith as a contrast to the chaos in his family, Koontz converted in college because it gave him answers for his life, admiring its "intellectual rigor" and saying it permits a view of life that sees mystery and wonder in all things. He says he sees the Church as English writer and Roman Catholic convert G.K. Chesterton did. Koontz notes that spirituality has always been part of his books, as are grace and our struggle as fallen souls, but he "never get[s] on a soapbox".
In the 1970s, Koontz began to grow a magnum publishing mainstream of suspense and horror fiction, both under his own name and several pseudonyms, sometimes publishing up to eight books a year. Koontz has stated that he began using pen names after several editor convinced him that authors who switched back and forth between different genres invariably fell victim to "negative crossover" (alienating established fans and simultaneously failing to pick up any new ones). Known pseudonyms used by Koontz during his career include Deanna Dwyer, K. R. Dwyer, Aaron Wolfe, David Axton, Brian Coffey, John Hill, Leigh Nichols, Owen West, Richard Paige, Leonard Chris, and Anthony North. Many of Koontz's pseudonymous novels are now available under his real name.
After thirty-five novels, Koontz's acknowledged breakthrough novel was Whispers, published in 1980. The two books before that - The Key to Midnight and The Funhouse also sold over a million copies, but were written under pen names. Thus although Whispers is Koontz's third paperback bestseller, it was the first credited to Koontz. From then on Koontz's books regularly became paperback bestsellers, but his first hardcover bestseller which finally promised some financial stability and lifted him out of the midlist range was his fifty-first book Strangers.Since then, ten hardcovers and thirteen paperbacks written by Koontz have reached #1 on the New York Times Bestseller list.
In 1997, psychologist Katherine Ramsland published an extensive biography of Koontz based on interviews with him and his family. This "psychobiography" (as Ramsland called it) often showed the conception of Koontz's characters and plots from events in his own life.
Early author photos on the back of many of his novels show a balding Koontz with a mustache. After Koontz underwent hair transplantation surgery in the late 1990s, his subsequent books have featured a new clean-shaven appearance with a fuller head of hair. Koontz explained the change by claiming that he was tired of looking like G. Gordon Liddy.
Since 1988 Koontz has contributed almost $73,000 to conservative Republican candidates and causes. He donated to the 2008 US Presidential campaigns of Mitt Romney and John McCain. Newsmeat.com, ? Dean Koontz's Federal Campaign Contribution Report] He and Mrs. Koontz have contributed over $138,000 to Republican candidates for federal office and Republican organizations (1991–2009). In 2005 he supported Governor of California Arnold Schwarzenegger with $5000 in cash donations and more than $100,000 for a fund raising dinner for 123.
Many of his novels are set in Newport Beach, California. As of 2006 he lives there with his wife, Gerda. In 2008 he was the world's sixth most highly paid author, tied with John Grisham at $25 million annually.
One of Dean Koontz's pen names was inspired by his dog, Trixie Koontz, a golden retriever, shown in many of his book-jacket photos. Originally a service dog with Canine Companions for Independence (CCI), a charitable organization that provides service dogs for people with disabilities. Trixie was a gift from CCI in gratitude of the Koontz's substantial donations, totalling $2,500,000 between 1991 and 2004. 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.In 2004 when Koontz wrote and edited Life Is Good: Lessons in Joyful Living in her name and in 2005, Koontz wrote a second book credited to Trixie, Christmas Is Good. Both books are written from a supposed canine perspective on the joys of life. The royalties of the books were donated to Canine Companions for Independence. In 2007, Trixie contracted terminal cancer creating a tumor in her heart. The Koontzes had her put to sleep outside of their family home on June 30. After Trixie's death, Koontz has continued writing on his website under Trixie's names, in "TOTOS", standing for Trixie on the Other Side.It is widely thought that Trixie was his inspiration for his November 2007 book The Darkest Evening of the Year, about a woman who runs a golden retriever rescue home, and who rescues a 'special' dog, named Nickie, who eventually saves her life. In August 2009, Dean published "A Big Little Life," a memoir of his life with Trixie.
In October 2008 Koontz released he had adopted a new dog, Anna. It was eventually learned that Anna was the grandniece of Trixie.
art dealer and professional thief (Tucker appeared in the novels Blood Risk, Surrounded, and The Wall of Masks, all written under the pseudonym Brian Coffey); and the (as yet unfinished) Moonlight Bay Trilogy, whose hero, Christopher Snow, appears in the novels Fear Nothing and Seize the Night (a proposed third entry, Ride the Storm, has yet to appear). In recent years, however, Koontz has written four novels featuring the character of Odd Thomas (Odd Thomas, Forever Odd, Brother Odd, and Odd Hours), as well as the ongoing Dean Koontz's Frankenstein series, based on a concept for a failed television series that Koontz was briefly involved with. The show's pilot episode wound up being repackaged as a direct-to-DVD movie. Additionally, the Christopher Snow novels are loosely connected to Watchers, and the Tranquility Motel of Strangers appears in the Odd Passenger web series. Odd Thomas also had a link to the Christopher Snow series via a sweatshirt with the words "mystery Train." Deucalion of the Frankenstein series made an appearance at St. Bart's monastery which was the backdrop for Brother Odd.
The female lead is often intelligent, beautiful, witty, and assertive, and is just as often paired with a more sensitive and easygoing male counterpart (e.g., Bobby and Julie Dakota in The Bad Place, Detectives Michael Madison and Carson O'Conner in Dean Koontz's Frankenstein, Tommy and Del in Ticktock, and Jimmy and Lorrie Tock in Life Expectancy, and Odd and Stormy in Odd Thomas, to name a few).
Several of Koontz's female protagonists are single mothers bringing up their children against all the odds.
Male protagonists are usually tough and capable, often either police officers (as in Phantoms, Dragon Tears, or The Door to December) or seemingly mild mannered sorts who are revealed to have police or military experience in their background (as in The Good Guy, Dark Rivers of the Heart, The Eyes of Darkness,Watchers,Shadow Fires, and others).
Many of Koontz's heroes come from abusive (or at least dysfunctional) backgrounds, but are nonetheless portrayed as successful, financially independent, strong-willed, and emotionally stable.
Conversely, his antagonists are often sociopath monsters with no redeeming or humanizing qualities whatsoever, who are invariably destroyed by the story's end; many of Koontz's villains are delusional, and consider their extremely warped and elaborate worldviews to be philosophically transcendent (e.g., Edgler Vess from Intensity, Corky Laputa from The Face, Vassago from Hideaway, Bryan Drackman from Dragon Tears, Vince Nasco from Watchers, Preston Maddoc from One Door Away from Heaven, Valis in Velocity, Thomas Shaddack in Midnight, Junior Cain in From the Corner of His Eye, and Krait in The Good Guy).
Many of Koontz's novels feature sympathetic portrayals of characters who suffer from some mental or physical abnormality (e.g., Christopher Snow from the Moonlight Bay Trilogy, Regina from Hideaway, Shepherd in By the Light of the Moon, Thomas in The Bad Place, and Harry in Midnight, which smoothly combines with Koontz's common theme of dogs, as portrayed by Harry's helpful service dog who also provides him with friendship).
Koontz is an only child, and many of the protagonists in his stories are only children (e.g. Christopher Snow, Odd Thomas, Jimmy Tock - although born a twin, he was raised an only child - from Life Expectancy, Laura Shane from Lightning, Fric from The Face).
Plot
Though Koontz's books often feature fantastical plot elements, he usually offers plausible, logically consistent science-based explanations for these bizarre events. Very few of Koontz's novels involve the overtly supernatural, instead often relying on unique genetic traits and natal conditions.
Koontz's protagonists often arm themselves with guns to combat the various monsters and madmen they are forced to do battle with. Often a Chief's Special or Combat Magnum Heckler & Koch P7 appear as handguns (Koontz himself is a lifelong gun owner). An exception to this rule has been the recurring character Odd Thomas who is said in fact to dislike guns due to his childhood trauma of his mother threatening suicide by using her favorite gun, however the fourth book in the series, Odd Hours seems to ignore this established trait.
A protagonist having to hide a dead body.
A desperate struggle for survival that leads to a final confrontation where good completely vanquishes evil, usually leading to a "happy ending" for the main characters.
A shadowy conspiracy of assassination or illicit and unethical scientific research — or both — involving the police or a government agency, or rogue elements within them.
Themes
Serious themes about the importance of faith, especially faith in God.
Duality, such as Mr. Murder or a key point in House of Thunder.
Characters who follow an unwavering moral compass, but do not conform to organized religion or depend on the law.
The ideal that love and compassion can save one from the apparent absurdities of existence and the cruelties of life.
Love for children by their parents.
Reflection (sometimes at length) on the decline of modern society in the past twenty to thirty years, either in a dialogue between two characters or in the private musings of the protagonist, sometimes centering the blame on liberal-based tolerance of criminal and/or undesirable activity; free love, drug use, and political correctness are frequent targets (the antagonist of Dragon Tears, for instance, evidently owes not only his superhuman abilities but also his pathological personality to his mother's use of illicit drugs while he was in utero).
A particular high respect for humanity and repugnance for those who degrade any human. Sometimes (as in One Door Away from Heaven) taking a critical stance against "life" issues like Utilitarian bioethics.
A lack of atonement or redemption from the villains and antagonists, coinciding with main characters who are (eventually) clearly depicted as either good or evil with little moral ambiguity. Little sympathy is elicited for the antagonists. However, two exceptions to this are Watchers and Mr. Murder.
Scientific themes such as Quantum Theory and Quantum Mechanics have emerged in many of Koontz's novels, providing a new and boundless territory of unique and enigmatic subject matter.
Other trademarks
Koontz is an avid dog lover, and canines (typically an unusually smart Golden or Labrador Retriever) often feature prominently in his works: Fear Nothing, Seize the Night, The Taking, Watchers, Dark Rivers of the Heart, Dragon Tears, One Door Away from Heaven, Ticktock, Twilight Eyes (Towards the end of the book) and The Darkest Evening of the Year are prime examples. Cats have often fared worse in his books (Koontz is allergic to felines), though he has occasionally included cats as characters, most notably the smart feline Mungojerrie in the Christopher Snow novels, Terrible Chester in the Odd Thomas novels and Aristophanes in The Mask.
A setting in southern California.
A Smith and Wesson .38 caliber Chiefs Special or Heckler and Koch P7.
Use of the words "preternatural", "ozone", "spoor," "susurration" and "blacktop" is prevalent in his books.
Vivid, detailed descriptions of the settings' architectural and interior design elements, such as beveled glass.
Street lights being described as "Sodium Vapor lights".
Amoral scientists using brutalizing techniques (sometimes upon children) to further their research (Sole Survivor, Midnight, Frankenstein, The Door to December, The Eyes of Darkness)
References to literature and poetry of which Koontz is a fan. The poetry of T. S. Eliot plays a prominent role in The Taking, and many of the same lines by Eliot are seen in Velocity. Fear Nothing includes a character named Tom Eliot, another reference to the famous poet. Little Ozzie from the Odd Thomas series often quotes T.S. Eliot and Shakespeare.
Plants and flowers are described in hortocultural detail, and bougainvillea flowers often feature in Dean Koontz's books.
Small references to Japan are often made. Such as plants and characters with a Japanese name, or people having Japanese gardens, furniture or enjoying Japanese food and drink.
Strange, quirky descriptions, e.g. The Darkest Evening of the Year "...but a pair of lamps shed light as lusterless as ashes and the colors were muted as though settled smoke from a long-quenched fire had laid a patina on them."
Frequently references Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
Frequent quotations from The Book of Counted Sorrows, a book that Koontz made up. Aside from the quotes, he personally wrote, Koontz wrote one book of poetry, entitled "The Paper Doorway."
Frequent instances of characters with minor wounds self-administering or being treated with Neosporin.
Main characters drive a Ford Explorer in several novels.
Frequently mentions The United States Marine Corps.
Though several of his novels have been adapted either as motion pictures or television movies, Koontz is generally unhappy with most of these adaptations. According to a 1996 interview, Koontz was so unhappy with the final cut of the film adaptation of his novel Hideaway that he now insists on keeping creative control over all subsequent films based on his books.
Film adaptations
Frankenstein
The Husband (TBA) — Focus Features Dean Koontz The Husband, The Husband Movie - Dean Koontz - The Official Site
Frankenstein (2004) — USA Network - starring Adam Goldberg, Parker Posey, Michael Madsen, Vincent Perez, and Thomas Kretschmann (Koontz pulled out of the project midway through production because he did not like the direction the film was headed. He ended up writing his own books with the storyline he had originally created. The project continued without him.) Dean Koontz Website, Suspense Novel - Dean Koontz - The Official Site
Black River (2001) — Fox - starring Jay Mohr, and Stephen Tobolowsky
Sole Survivor (2000) — Fox - starring Billy Zane, John C. McGinley, and Gloria Reuben
Watchers Reborn (1998) — Concorde Pictures - starring Mark Hamill
Phantoms (1998) — Miramax/Dimension Films - starring Peter O'Toole, Ben Affleck, Rose McGowan, and Joanna Going.
Mr. Murder (1998) — ABC—starring Stephen Baldwin, Thomas Haden Church, and James Coburn
Intensity (1997) — Fox—starring John C. McGinley, Molly Parker, and Piper Laurie
Hideaway (1995) — Tristar Pictures—starring Jeff Goldblum, Christine Lahti, Jeremy Sisto, and Alicia Silverstone