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Title: Hell's Gate
Series: ----------
Author: Dean Koontz
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: SF
Pages: 190
Words: 68K
Series: ----------
Author: Dean Koontz
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: SF
Pages: 190
Words: 68K
Synopsis:
|
Victor Salsburys
awakes with almost no memories and a voice in his head telling him
what to do. Without emotion and almost no control, Victor obeys and
kills a man, who looks just like him. Wondering what is going on,
Victor follows the instructions of the voice and finds a cave and
falls asleep.
Waking up 2 weeks
later, Victor moves into a house in a small town. He seems to have
shaken off whatever control the unseen voices had over him but he is
filled with knowledge that he doesn't know how he owns. He IS Victor
Salsbury but he appears to also be something else, something
stronger, faster and smarter. Victor is attacked one night by an
automaton that uses weaponry Victor instinctively understands.
However, Victor is wounded and is nursed back to health by the young
woman who sold him the house. Victor also saw a glowing portal
through the attacker came and behind that portal were beings of
demonic visage.
One of Victor's
pieces of luggage turns out to be a super computer and tells him that
he is an experiment from the far future where Earth and all alternate
Earth's have been conquered by the beings Victor saw. Victor is
humanity's last chance at destroying the machinery that allows the
creatures to travel across the multiverse. Victor must cross the
portal, make his way to Earth Prime and destroy the starship base
where the demons live.
He succeed with the
help of other alternate Earth humans and returns to the girl and
lives happily ever after.
My
Thoughts:
|
Funny thing about Koontz. Even though he re-uses the same ideas over
and over, he re-uses them in different combinations so that no story
is the same. We have the name Victor, proto-flesh that doesn't bleed,
inimical beings that want to destroy our world, etc. And it is a
completely new story.
I had to wonder if James Cameron read this before he made the
Terminator movie. While I was reading this I had to look up the
published date (it was 1970 by the way) because so many of the things
reminded me of the Terminator. A soldier returned to the past,
portals that could only pass certain materials through, unstoppable
killing machines that were vaguely humanoid. It wasn't a play by play
but the similarities were enough that it raised questions in my mind.
The ending is as rushed as ever, or maybe I should say Koontz rushes
the ending and has never stopped that practice even in his books
today?
And yet, while I complain about stuff and only give this 3 stars, I
have no intention (as of yet anyway) of stopping my reading of books
by Koontz. I still enjoy them even while acknowledging their inherent
weaknesses. I guess that makes him a good author? Facepalm
Oh, and that cover? It really does look like that. It is the weirdest
thing ever.
★★★☆☆
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