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Title: Time Thieves
Series: ----------
Author: Dean Koontz
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: SF
Pages: 146
Format: Digital Scan
Series: ----------
Author: Dean Koontz
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: SF
Pages: 146
Format: Digital Scan
Synopsis:
|
Peter Mullion wakes
up sitting in his car in his garage and can't remember a thing about
how he got there. He knows he went to his cabin to work on it, but
that is it. When his wife comes home and sees him, she tells him he's
been missing for 3 weeks! Peter sets out to investigate just what
happened to him.
Unfortunately, he's
having trouble counting or keeping track of time or even where he is.
He loses his way one day in his office building and when he comes to
his wife tells him he's been missing again, for several days. Peter
sees the same man watching him, at a restaurant, at home, wherever he
turns, there he is. Peter and his wife Delia head up to the mountain
cabin to see if that holds any clues. They find the cabin painted,
which means Peter was there. However, upon further examination, it
appears that the painting was done less than a day ago, not weeks ago
like it should have. Peter's paranoia isn't so misplaced after all.
One night Peter
begins hearing voices and he realizes he can hear other people's
thoughts. Peter ends up in communication with an alien being, who has
been spying on him using its robot servants. Peter flees, honing his
mental skills. During a cat and mouse game, he destroys the minds of
the robots. Now he just has to deal with the aliens.
The aliens mentally
kidnap his wife and tell Peter that they accidentally killed him 3
weeks ago. They rebuilt him but due to them not being familiar with
human biology, accidentally gave him telepathy. They say Humanity
isn't ready for that and they just want to take that ability away
from Peter. No harm, no violence, just remove a mistake that they
made. Peter refuses and tells them every single human is alone and
that they shouldn't be. Peter kills the aliens, who are pacifists at
heart and he and Delia go off to live a happy life, spreading
telepathy to all and sundry like corn kernels to chickens.
My
Thoughts:
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First, that cover has ZERO to do with this story. There is no sexy
woman with a ray gun, Peter doesn't dress up like a ninja and crouch
on a mountain and the UFO is only talked about. It's actually parked
inside a mountain for the whole book.
The title only makes sense if you consider the aliens to have stolen
time from Peter when he went missing those several times. They can't
actually manipulate time. I kept waiting for that right up until
almost the end of the book.
The tension was pretty high for most of the book and I liked that.
Koontz kept me edgy and wondering just what was going to happen.
My issues came down to the fact that Peter killed the aliens because
they were going to take something back that had been given by
mistake. His life was not in danger, his wife's life was not in
danger but Peter had something and he wasn't going to give it up. The
justification given is because of how much Peter loves Delia, but
that just rang false. He was an adult who knew enough about how
Humanity would use such a gift and he was even told that it would
spread but he chose to keep it anyway. It almost felt like Koontz was
writing about a modern Adam and Eve, but ones that weren't deceived
into eating the forbidden fruit but ones who willfully chose to take
and eat such a fruit. Even “love” can be corrupted and that is
really applicable in this day and age with every idiot bleating about
“love” all the time but having no concrete concept of what Love
actually is.
My kindle had this at about 140 pages. I think the paperback runs
around 100, so either way, it was a short little novel bordering on
the novella. I wasn't expecting a mind blowing experience and I
wasn't disappointed. On the other hand, I wasn't disappointed. Glad I
read this but don't plan on ever reading it again.
I am thinking of adding an author's name as a tag to any series of
books that don't have a series associating them together. I've been
doing that with Dickens and I'm going to start now with Koontz. I
will have to decide if I want to start that with every book or not.
The problem with NOT doing it for every author is then remembering
which authors I AM doing it for. But if I do it for every author then
my tag cloud is going to grow humongously, even more ridiculous than
it already is. Do any of you have any thoughts or opinions or
anecdotes or experience to shed some light on this issue?
★★★☆☆
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