I'm tagging
@McBell and
@sun rise for this, as I discovered that what I tried to write to
@McBell in response to him on sun rise's profile page was too long for a profile page posting.
Me: I love the picture of the golden retriever in your profile. I'm currently reading a Dean Koontz novel that has a golden as a main character. Dean Koontz has and loves goldens, and he's written a couple of suspense novels that feature them.
@McBell wrote: Watchers is a really good book.
Me: Yep.
Watchers was published in 1987. Then, in 2020, Koontz came out with
Devoted which, while not exactly a sequel to
Watchers, nevertheless continued the side-story about the genetically enhanced golden retrievers who comprise "the Mysterium" and who presumably were descendants of the golden named Einstein in
Watchers. I had read
Devoted first, a few years ago when it first came out. I didn't know about
Watchers until recently when I became so hooked on Koontz's novels that I started reading his older stuff. So now I'm currently reading
Devoted for the second time, and enjoying how having read
Watchers now answers some questions regarding
Devoted.
Stephen King had always been my favorite author for horror, but now I'm leaning more towards Dean Koontz. Especially since I think that King tends to overwrite a bit in his later novels, and maybe could use a better editor (if he's even using an editor these days).
I find Koontz's horror to be more realistic, focusing less on the supernatural (although Koontz's horror isn't always entirely without a touch of the supernatural) and more on how flesh-and-blood human beings are the real monsters in this world. Granted, King also has written works featuring some monstrous human beings, especially the authoritarians in King's dystopian novel titled
The Long Walk, which is my favorite of his (first published in 1979 under King's pseudonym of Richard Bachman). But Dean Koontz gets my vote for America's Number One writer of suspense and horror.
To others reading this: What's your opinion on Dean Koontz? Do you compare him with Stephen King, or some other author? I understand that Koontz originally began as a writer of science fiction, but I haven't read any of his science fiction.
I'm also tagging
@Debater Slayer because I know he enjoys horror stories.