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Title: Seize the Night
Series: Moonlight Bay #2
Author: Dean Koontz
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Paranormal/Thriller
Pages: 482
Format: Digital Edition
Series: Moonlight Bay #2
Author: Dean Koontz
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Paranormal/Thriller
Pages: 482
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis:
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It has been a month
since the events in Fear Nothing. Chris Snow is just chilling
in Moonlight Bay, waiting to see if the end of the world will come
quickly or slowly. He's out bicycling one night when he meets an old
flame. She lost her husband 2 years ago and that very night her 6
year old boy has gone missing. Chris begins to track down the
kidnapper and ends up at the Wyvern Base. He has a run in a psycho
who tries to kill him and then in the process of leaving, has another
encounter with the Troop. Also, Orson the dog has gone missing during
the initial attack on Chris. While hiding from the Troop, he's
rescued by his surfer friend and they continue the hunt for Jimmy.
They find a room that appears to take them somewhere else and they
appear to see things that have happened in the past. They barely
escape with their lives when some kind of monster infects a past
researcher and they're stuck with him. Thankfully, the “time
machine” brings them back before they get axed.
Once home, before
daybreak, Chris and Bobbie are confronted by the police and told to
ignore everything, as “Higher Ups” are taking care of it.
Considering the past track record of these “Higher Ups”, Chris
and Bobby decide to ignore the cops and keep on looking for little
Jimmy once night falls. They are told that the retrovirus burns
itself out as the victims implode psychologically (ie, suicide) and
that there are humans with natural immunity. Humanity is saved from
the devastation Chris's mom let loose. Hurray. They still have to
find Jimmy and some other children who have gone missing.
Chris, Bobby, Sasha
(Chris's girlfriend), Mungojerrie (an intelligence enhanced cat) and
some others all had to Wyvern to rescue Jimmy and the other missing
children. Mungojerrie detects that the kids are beneath the time
machine room and the machine is running while they make their rescue.
Bobby is killed by security from the past and everyone sees into
another dimension and a being comes through. It turns out that a
murderous psycho who has been groups of children over the last 2
years is the head of the Mystery Train project and he wants to go to
the other world so he can kill to his hearts content. It would appear
though that he has tried to open a door to hell and something gets
through. The group meets themselves on the elevator and Chris grabs
Bobby and takes him with them. They escape and the time machine goes
nuts. They watch it un-make itself, thus undoing the whole project
but they still remember it.
Turns out the
murderous psycho is still alive but now working on another project.
Chris vows to stop him again and they all live happily ever after.
My
Thoughts:
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This was much more paranormal than the previous book. That just had a
retrovirus turning everyone into bestial creatures who were just
slathering to kill, pillage and rape. Here, the Mystery Train is a
time machine only it turns out to “sidewise” in time and bad
things have happened, hence why the project was shut down.
This book was only 48hrs and my goodness did Koontz pack in the
thrills and chills. He's very descriptive and I have to admit I
wanted to skip it all but his descriptions really set the mood. Very
atmospheric writing and downright creepy in place. I really liked
it.
I also liked how Koontz unabashedly talks about the spiritual and how
it is just as real as anything “scyenze” today can try to
explain. In one paragraph Chris the main character is talking to his
friend Bobby and Bobby says:
“That doesn't bother you like it does me, 'cause you've got God
and an afterlife and choirs of angels and palaces of gold
in the sky but all I've got is broccoli.”
It is kind of silly but it really got across the hope I have as a
Christian. It's refreshing and encouraging.
I think the only thing I didn't really care for was how open ended
the book was. Yes, the Mystery Train project is revealed, the
retrovirus appears to be either burning itself out or a cure quickly
on the way but with the whole Tornado Alley project throwaway line
and the revelation that the murderous child burning psycho is still
alive and working, well, it came across as Koontz leaving the door
open for more books if he needed it. He didn't have a definite “This
Is the End” like he did for Odd Thomas.
And that reminds me of the only other nitpicky thing I can blab
about. The recycling of ideas. Depending on how things continue in
this vein, I might end up having to read these books a bit further
apart than I have been. Time machines, evil materialized, calm and
rational head character, creepy and spooky looks into a horrible
dimension or the future, it all is extremely familiar. Now, Koontz
does a fantastic job of not making the stories (so far) clones of
each other but I'm leery of the same ideas being used in different
ways. We'll see what the future holds.
Overall, I'm pretty pleased and the taut thrill of reading this was
just what my brain needed.
★★★☆½
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