๐”– Scriptorium
โœฆ   LIBER   โœฆ

๐Ÿ“

Odd Apocalypse: An Odd Thomas Novel

โœ Scribed by Koontz, Dean Ray


Publisher
Bantam
Year
2012
Tongue
German
Series
Odd Thomas 5
Category
Fiction

โฌ‡  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

โœฆ Synopsis


Koontz gives [Odd Thomas] wit, good humor, a familiarity with the dark side of humanityand moral outrage.*USA Today

Once presided over by a Roaring 20s Hollywood mogul, the magnificent West Coast estate known as Roseland now harbors a reclusive billionaire financier and his faithful servantsand their guests: Odd Thomas, the young fry cook who sees the dead and tries to help them, and Annamaria, his inscrutably charming traveling companion. Fresh from a harrowing clash with lethal adversaries, they welcome their hosts hospitality. But Odds extraordinary eye for the uncanny detects disturbing secrets that could make Roseland more hell than haven.

Soon enough the house serves up a taste of its terrors, as Odd begins to unravel the darkest mystery of his curious career. What consequences await those who confront evil at its most profound? Odd only knows.

Odd Thomas is the greatest character Dean Koontz has ever created. Hes funny, humble, immensely likable, courageous, and just a joy to read about.*Seattle Post-Intelligencer


[Odd Thomas is] one of the most remarkable and appealing characters in current fiction.The Virginian-Pilot
*
Supernatural thrills with a side of laughs.
The Denver Post


Includes a preview of the next novel in the Odd Thomas series: Deeply Odd!

Amazon.com Review

An interview with Michael Koryta (The Prophet*).
*

MICHAEL: In the new novel, Odd Apocalypse, you write that "between birth and burial, we find ourselves in a comedy of mysteries." That statement could be a guiding light for the Odd series, and perhaps even your work in general of late. Was allowing the laughs to join the darkness a conscious decision?

DEAN: Humor began to enter my work as far back as Watchers (1987), and by Lightning (1988), my agent and publisher at that time became alarmed and counseled me that suspense and humor never mix. They were not able to offer a cogent explanation of why the two never mix. One of my favorite films of all time is "North by Northwest," which is tense and funny; so I just kept doing what I was doing. By the time I moved to Bantam Books with Fear Nothing (1998), humor became the binding glue in all of my books except for The Taking, Velocity, The Husband, and Your Heart Belongs to Me.

Odd Thomas is speaking for me when he says, "Humanity is a parade of fools, and I'm right up front with a baton." Odd is a spiritual guy, and in my experience, genuinely spiritual people--as opposed to those for whom faith is either a crutch or a bludgeon--have a great sense of humor. They recognize that our fallen world is not just tragic but also absurd, often hilariously absurd, and that laughing at humanity's hubris and reckless transgressive behavior is a potent way to deny legitimacy to that hubris. Besides, if a character is able to make you laugh out loud, a bond is formed that ensures you will worry more for him when he finds himself in jeopardy. And I will always remember that it wasn't my looks or my sartorial splendor or macho toughness--ha!--that won Gerda; she says that she laughed so much on our first date, her stomach hurt the next day. That was better than being told, as I expected, that her stomach hurt because, after I took her home, she spent the night throwing up.

MICHAEL: A three-part short novel titled Odd Interlude was released in ebook-only form this summer. Tell us a little about the way this was conceived and written. Did you have that planned before the new novel or did it come to you later in Odd's journey?

DEAN: I had written a 32,000-word ebook novella, The Moonlit Mind, to intrigue readers about a forthcoming novel, 77 Shadow Street. The novella sold very well and drew strong reader response. In fact, I'm pretty sure a lot of people liked Moonlit better than 77 Shadow Street! So as I was finishing Odd Apocalypse, my publisher asked me to write a 60,000- to 70,000-word short novel in three parts to reintroduce readers to Odd. It was outside the seven-book arc of the series, and I had great fun with it. By the way, those readers who don't do ebooks tend to get exercised about a piece appearing only digitally. In order to avoid being whacked by an irate reader while waiting at the counter for my Big Mac, I am happy to tell you that Odd Interlude will be published in paperback within a few months.

MICHAEL: Rumor has it a movie of Odd Thomas is on the way, and that you're pleased with it, which is anything but the rule when it comes to adaptations. What can you tell us about the film version and why you are so pleased with Stephen Sommers' take?

DEAN: I have a glowing review of the film at deankoontz.com and on my official Facebook page. Anton Yelchin and Addison Timlim give wonderfully nuanced and affecting performances. Steve's sense of pace and his writing are even better than his previous best, and his scene transitions are amazing, something really new and highly effective. The picture drops much from the book, but at the same time it's absolutely true to the book, to its characters and its themes.

Steve is also a great guy and a family man. When he'd send me long emails about progress on the picture, he'd write also about his daughters and family things. After one such email, I wrote him back to say that he was so normal, compared to most of my Hollywood experiences, that I was getting suspicious. I said I was steeling myself to wake up one morning and discover that he'd been arrested with Charlie Sheen, crossing the border from Mexico in a school bus loaded with drugs and explosives.

(continued)

Read the full interview
See all of Michael Koryta's books

Review

Praise for the Odd Thomas series: One of his finest books, and Odd himself is a superb character Independent Odd Thomas is a page-turner ... A read-at-a-sitting novel with a terrific final twist Observer Humour, humanity and horror, the classic Koontz concoction The TimesPraise for Dean Koontz: Dean Koontz is not just a master of our darkest dreams, but also a literary juggler The Times A terrific pursuit story ... clever, up-to-the-minute, and riveting Guardian There s surprise after surprise, including a killer finale ... a read-in-one-go novel Independent on Sunday Psychologically complex, masterly and satisfying . --The New York Times


๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Brother Odd: An Odd Thomas Novel
โœ Koontz, Dean Ray ๐Ÿ“‚ Fiction ๐Ÿ“… 2007 ๐Ÿ› Bantam ๐ŸŒ German

<div><p><strong><em>NEW YORK TIMES </em>BESTSELLER</strong><br></p><p>BONUS: This edition contains an excerpt from Dean Koontz's <em>Deeply Odd.</em><br><br><em>Loop me in, odd one. </em>The words, spoken in the deep of night by a sleeping child, chill the young man watching over her. For this was a

Deeply Odd: An Odd Thomas Novel
โœ Koontz, Dean Ray ๐Ÿ“‚ Fiction ๐Ÿ“… 2013 ๐Ÿ› Bantam ๐ŸŒ German

<div><p><strong>The pistol appeared in his hand the way a dove appears in the hand of a good magician, as if it materialized out of thin air. You think I wont do it right here in the open. But youd be surprised. . . . Youll drop before you get the breath to scream. </strong><br><strong><em></em></st