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Fiction

Fiction is what makes that hour-long BART ride to work bearable. Fiction is like a glorious movie that plays inside your brain. Welcome to RateItAll's fiction review page.

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20 hours ago

To put it plain and simple, this is a very, very good book. I've read most of King's novels over the years and this one doesn't disappoint. It's classic King. This is one of those books that you can't stop thinking about after you've set it down. Would highly recommend to anyone!
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20 hours ago

If you're looking for "Big Canvas" Stephen King, the man who crafted "The Stand" and "Needful Things," he's back.

For a long book, the pacing is incredibly and furiously fast. My knock on Stevie has always been he likes to chill out and listen to himself write . . . I could go without the cute "omniscient" stuff like "Come with me, let's go here, etc." But it's a breather in a book full of happenings.

Many authors would have made this story about the dome. This one's about the people inside of it that supply all of the fireworks, and there are some damn good fireworks.

As Ebert would say, you are buying this looking for a Stephen King book, and you get a damn fine Stephen King book, thus, the five stars.
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20 hours ago

Although the ads say this was a completed work, it sure doesn't feel like it. It is closer to an outline than a novel. The whole thing leaves the reader wanting the real thing. It could have been much more.
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20 hours ago

1,088 pages of little more than guts, gore and splatter?!

Sounds like a work-in-progress that simply grew and grew but never jelled and came together. But King nevertheless pulled it out of the back of a drawer and decided to have it published just in time for gift giving for the holidays and rake in some bucks.
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20 hours ago

Under the Dome is a very different novel for Stephen King. Except for the ending, the novel is grounded in reality. It's not a "fun" novel and is filled with some very disturbing content matter, which pertain to the collapse of society. I've heard about the political undertones of the novel, but these aren't very apparent unless you've read about them. Even though Under the Dome is very hefty book, the scope is relatively small. The only thing I can say negative about it is that has WAY too many characters. I'm a big fan of storylines with several interconnecting characters, but there are so many it takes a while to "know" them. It was almost a relief when they started dying off (and boy, do they) because it meant that there were less to keep track of.
Overall this will go down as one of King's best because its not really about the supernatural..it's about the inherent evil in people..it's a great cultural study on par with The Stand. It's also deliver a bit of morbid amusement as you get to watch things (horribly) fall apart as the situation gets more dire.
The this novel will always be compared to The Stand (King's best work) and it does stack up becuase they carry the same themes are executed very well. The first hundred pages are very reminiscent of the "Nature's Cruelest Cut" section of The Stand and the middle section is all build up and socio-political, and the last two hundred pages are a brutal bloodbath as all the tension comes to a welcome climax.
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20 hours ago

If you are after high quality Crichton, this book will disappoint. Its an okay read, but not really worth the 9.99 Kindle price.
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20 hours ago

A good book but not as good as some of the others.A Novel: Pursuit of Honor by Flinn (Hardcover) (Pursuit of Honor: A Novel (Hardcover))
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20 hours ago

I just finished reading this today on Kindle, and I loved it. Koontz explores spirituality, chaos theory, Darwinism (and why one character, a mathematician, doesn't believe in evolution, which I find refreshing!), dogs, family, wonderment, and of course good old fashioned murder and mayhem with interwoven elements.

I highly recommend this. I have read many, many of his books. Some ended abruptly, some were unsatisfactory, but this ended just right, with just the right amount of hope.
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20 hours ago

By the time I got to the last third of the book, I started counting the pages, thinking "Well, this must be Part 1." But no, the book just ends with a quick synopsis and even that doesn't really wrap everything up. Did Koontz just get tired of the story? Was he late for a hair dying appointment? Go figure
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20 hours ago

Dean Koontz has long been one of my favorite authors and I've followed his work closely over the years. Therefore, I can only assume that for his latest novel, 'Breathless', Mr. Koontz was either, a) under tremendous pressure to meet a deadline from his publisher, or b) experimenting with some type of "free-form" writing similar to the dissembled hodgepodge of sounds that several popular bands tried to pass off as music in the early 70's.

'Breathless' contains none of the heart pounding suspense, skin crawling creepiness, or supernatural thrills characteristic of Dean Koontz novels. Both clever banter and humor are absent, and even mystery is minimal. There are way too many characters; all of whom are sorely underdeveloped - with the possible exception of Merlin the Irish wolfhound. (At least the use of a dog in a key role is consistent with recent Koontz books.)

For the past several years, Dean Koontz has included both subtle and overt social commentary in his works. While 'Breathless' is not totally lacking in this aspect, I found the scarcity and toned down nature of the editorializing somewhat disappointing. Even more disappointing is Koontz's failure to use the words "preternatural" and "susurration" even once in 'Breathless'!

Because of my respect for Mr. Koontz and his willingness to take risks in writing, I find it difficult to totally diss 'Breathless', even though reading this book left me anything but breathless. My suggestion to first time Koontz readers is to start with something other than 'Breathless'. 'Strange Highways', 'Intensity', 'Odd Thomas' and 'Life Expectancy' for example, are just a few of my favorites. 'The Husband', 'The Good Guy', and 'Relentless' also rank high on my list of recommendations. And do look forward to new Dean Koontz releases; assured there will be far more hits than misses.
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