Book Review: Dean Koontz’s The Night Window
Slowly others have emerged to stand with Jane Hawk on her quest to take down the architects of an operation to control every level of society via an army of mind-altered citizens.
Slowly others have emerged to stand with Jane Hawk on her quest to take down the architects of an operation to control every level of society via an army of mind-altered citizens.
Jane Hawk, one of the FBI’s top agents until she became the nation’s most-wanted fugitive, intends to take down the cabal. The one that intends to use her son to break her.
In Jane Hawk’s battle against this terrifying nano conspiracy, she draws down on a twisted soul with an army of professional killers on call.
Jane Hawk — fiction’s most relentless, resourceful, stunning new heroine — continues her battle against a murderous conspiracy in the riveting follow-up to The Silent Corner.
Admired and happy people of talent and accomplishment are committing suicide in surprising numbers. And Jane becomes the most-wanted fugitive in America.
The carnival and Gypsy Mummy have returned to Pico Mundo, but Stormy is still dead, and Odd is having dreams of a drowned Pico Mundo while grappling with a satanic cult.
A short side trip to help a crazed dead man running through Odd’s car before Odd and Stormy head off to the carnival and those momentous words from the Gypsy Mummy.
The riveting story of Jonah Kirk, a musical prodigy beginning to explore his own gifts when he crosses a group of very dangerous people, with shattering consequences.
A rhinestone truck driver shocks Odd with a vision of a multiple homicide not yet committed leading to a riveting road chase to prevent the tragedy and meet a collection of eccentrics who become his allies.
Welcomed to Roseland estate, Odd and Annamaria detect disturbing secrets that could make Roseland more hell than haven, and soon enough the house serves up a taste of its terrors.