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Winter Moon

by Dean Koontz

Other authors: See the other authors section.

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
2,163257,433 (3.36)16
Fiction. Horror. Suspense. Thriller. HTML:"Koontz is brilliant in the creation of his characters and in building tension."
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES

In Los Angeles, a hot Hollywood director, high on PCP, turns a city street into a fiery apocalypse. Heroic LAPD officer Jac McGarvey is badly wounded and will not walk for months. His wife and his child are left to fend for themselves against both criminals that control an increasingly violent city and the dead director's cult of fanatic fans.
In a lonely corner of Montana, Eduardo Fernandez, the father of McGarvey's murdered partner, witnesses a strange nocturnal sight. The stand of pines outside his house suddenly glows with eerie amber light, and Fernandez senses a watcher in the winter woods. As the seasons change, the very creatures of the forest seem in league with a mysterious presence. Fernandez is caught up in a series of chilling incidents that escalate toward a confronation that could rob him of his sanity or his lifeâ??or both.
As events careen out of control, the McGarvey family is drawn to Fernandez's Montana ranch. In that isolated place they discover their destiny in a terrifying and fiercely suspenseful encounter with a hostile, utterly ruthless, and enigmatic enemy, from which neither the living nor the dead are safe.

BONUS: This edition contains an excerpt from Dean Koontz's The City… (more)
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» See also 16 mentions

English (24)  Spanish (1)  All languages (25)
Showing 1-5 of 24 (next | show all)
Oddly, I had completely forgotten about this book. The premise didn’t ring a bell, and neither did I recollect anything when I began re-reading. I find this surprising, as it’s quite a good story. More purely science-fiction than much of Dean Koontz’s work, which I think of as supernatural and paranormal thrillers. Perhaps I had forgotten it, because while the first half of the book contains tension, it flows around two separate men with seemingly no connection. One dealing with the adversity of being a cop injured in the line of duty, and the other dealing with a no lesser threat but undeniably strange. It’s in the second half of the book that the tension escalates, ending at a fast pace towards the end. If I have any negatives to add, it’s that although the story is over, the conclusion feels a little rushed after so much tension, which left me feeling a little dropped. I’m also not entirely certain the final decision the family makes felt entirely satisfying to me — I felt that had to be a better compromise. Still, these are small niggles, and I thoroughly recommend this book. Perhaps one to enjoy as a modern twist on the Lovecraft universe. ( )
  SharonMariaBidwell | Apr 18, 2023 |
One of Koontz's older books; Originally published under a different title and name. Good Story, typical Koontz. You know where it is going to wind up but regardless...prepare to be shaken up. ( )
  JHemlock | Sep 27, 2022 |
I really just couldn't finish this book. The first couple of chapters is just right-wing whining about how 'urban scum' are ruining the world. The writing itself is awful. ( )
  aeceyton | Dec 26, 2020 |
Please note that I gave this book 4.5 stars, but rounded it up to 5 stars on Goodreads.

Well this is old school Koontz and I like it. We did have a golden retriever, but you can't win them all.

"Winter Moon" follows two parallel stories. One of Heather and Jack McGarvey and their young son Toby. And the other follows Eduardo Fernandez. These people have never met, but due to the actions of one, both are going to come face to face with something that is intent on destruction.

Jack is a LAPD patrol officer whose life is changed after responding to a complaint at a gas station. Before he knows what has happened, a seemingly rich man has open fire, shooting him, his partner, and the owner and others. For he and Heather this is just another long line of things that have gone wrong for them in LA.

Eduardo is still grieving the death of his wife three years before and the most recent death of his son who was an LAPD police officer. Living in Montana, in a ranch that was left to him by his dead employer, Eduardo has almost everything he can want. Until one night a light and sound wakens him and he realizes he is not as alone as he thought.

I liked all of the characters very much. I have to say though that I didn't really get Eduardo though. Maybe because my first response to something that freaks me out is to get the hell out as fast as possible. His reasoning for staying and trying to understand what was going on felt a bit false to me as a reader. I think Koontz wanted to keep him there for the story purposes which is fine. But trying to have him handwave it away due to this and him being a hermit, not being believed, felt wrong somehow.

Another character that felt a bit off to me was the character of Toby. He is eight. He also swore around his parents and I almost fell over at that one. Believe me when I say that my parents would have had soap so fast in my mouth it would not have been funny. He also seemed older than his years, though you can explain that by what has happened in his own family, and the fights he endures after his father is shot. So I got it. At least Koontz resisted the urge to have him older than his years and somehow be a super genius (yeah one of these days I am going to do an entire Koontz read and you it will not be pretty).

The writing was great. Koontz can turn a sentence and can instill fear in you in just a few short words. I did notice a few typos here and there (nothing terrible, was was capitalized in a middle of a sentence and another word should have been "and") but nothing that would disturb anyone's reading. Sometimes he got a bit too into explaining guns (which made me think of later books) but other than that everything gelled together nicely.

The setting of LA and Montana stood apart quite differently. These characters in different places both going through such terrible things pretty much showcased how the grass is not always greener.

One thing that did blow me away while reading this is how crazy that this book was written in 1993 and right now the same discussion regarding police officers and guns is going on in this country. I do have to say that I get that there are good and bad police officers out there. Koontz though showcased a world that had gone crazy due to politicians making things easier for those out there to commit crimes and the police having no way to push back against it. The whole thing left me a little bit sour mouthed because I don't believe people are against police officers doing their job. They are against bad cops thinking they are above the law.
( )
  ObsidianBlue | Jul 1, 2020 |
Injured (shot) cop and family moved from LA to Montana for rest and relaxation. Invaded by aliens. Preposterous on all levels. Alien stopped by 8 year old son. Horrible comedy. Incredibly abrupt ending and return to terrible LA. ( )
  fwbl | May 17, 2020 |
Showing 1-5 of 24 (next | show all)
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» Add other authors (28 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Dean Koontzprimary authorall editionscalculated
Accornero, FrancoCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Anton, UweTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Koskela, PerttiTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Epigraph
Beaches, surfers, California girls.
Wind scented with fabulous dreams.
Bougainvillea, groves of oranges.
Stars are born, everything gleams.

A weather change.  Shadows fall.
New scent upon the wind -- deay.
Cocaine, Uzis, drive-by shootings.
Death is a banker.  Everyone pays.
--The Book of Counted Sorrows
Dedication
To Gerda, who knows a thousand reasons why, with much love
First words
Death was driving an emerald-green Lexus.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Originally published in a slightly different version as "Invasion", under the pseudonym "Aaron Wolfe"
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Fiction. Horror. Suspense. Thriller. HTML:"Koontz is brilliant in the creation of his characters and in building tension."
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES

In Los Angeles, a hot Hollywood director, high on PCP, turns a city street into a fiery apocalypse. Heroic LAPD officer Jac McGarvey is badly wounded and will not walk for months. His wife and his child are left to fend for themselves against both criminals that control an increasingly violent city and the dead director's cult of fanatic fans.
In a lonely corner of Montana, Eduardo Fernandez, the father of McGarvey's murdered partner, witnesses a strange nocturnal sight. The stand of pines outside his house suddenly glows with eerie amber light, and Fernandez senses a watcher in the winter woods. As the seasons change, the very creatures of the forest seem in league with a mysterious presence. Fernandez is caught up in a series of chilling incidents that escalate toward a confronation that could rob him of his sanity or his lifeâ??or both.
As events careen out of control, the McGarvey family is drawn to Fernandez's Montana ranch. In that isolated place they discover their destiny in a terrifying and fiercely suspenseful encounter with a hostile, utterly ruthless, and enigmatic enemy, from which neither the living nor the dead are safe.

BONUS: This edition contains an excerpt from Dean Koontz's The City

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Renamed from an early Dean Koontz (aka Aaron Wolfe) story called Invasion.
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