Why is Dean Koontz in the Horror Section...

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Why is Dean Koontz in the Horror Section...

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1ScribbleScribe
Dic 8, 2010, 1:18 pm

if he's not truely horror? His works seem more like suspense/thriller than horror because they lack a sense of despair and portrayal of helpless terror with the characters within his novels.

So, someone enlighten me, why is he in the horror section of the book store?

2Huge_Horror_Fan
Editado: Dic 8, 2010, 4:21 pm

I'm really guessing here...

It is foremost a marketing ploy. Dean Koontz started out writing horror and gathered a following. When he decided to branch out, as he so often does now, his name is still branded as "Horror Author". Everyone knows him as such, other than the people that still actually read his novels today. I think there is a true belief that if Koontz novels are in the horror section, more horror fans will come across them that read him previously, in the older days. They are easier to find, and I think both publishers and bookstores think it boosts sales from impulsive buying.

Although not as dramatic, Stephen King fits in this category almost as well. There are many of his non-horror novels in the horror section just because he is considered a "Horror Author".

3ScribbleScribe
Editado: Dic 8, 2010, 4:40 pm

You know, now that I know the difference, I feel misled and deceived! You telling me that it's a marketing ploy isnt helping with the feeling of someone deceiving me either. :/

"Dean Ray Koontz (born July 9, 1945) is an American author best known for his novels which could be described broadly as suspense thrillers. He also frequently incorporates elements of horror, science fiction, mystery, and satire. " http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dean_Koontz

4Huge_Horror_Fan
Dic 8, 2010, 4:43 pm

Sorry.

Maybe it is just because I read The Catcher in the Rye and I am being pessimistic. But honestly, mingling with some horror authors and knowing a little about the industry, I am likely not far from the mark.

The positive side of this is for the die-hard Koontz fans. Can you imagine going to the bookstore and having to check three or four different areas for books from the same author? I would find it irritating. At least you know that if you feel like reading Koontz, all the books are there together before you decide on what to buy.

5stretch
Dic 8, 2010, 4:52 pm

You know I've never thought of this as an issue before, but the bookstores I frequent don't even have a horror section. All fiction is listed by author. So I think of it as Dean Koontz section which I can largely ignore. There is something to be said for fiction without labels, except for the Sci-Fi and Fantasy stuff.

6ScribbleScribe
Dic 8, 2010, 6:45 pm

I frequent Borders...

7jseger9000
Editado: Dic 8, 2010, 11:52 pm

#4 - Can you imagine going to the bookstore and having to check three or four different areas for books from the same author? I would find it irritating.

Exactly. I have to admit that as a non-Koontz person, I still think he belongs in the horror section. Sure, he writes tons of suspense thrillers too, but he is broadly known for his horror stories, often with a supernatural angle.

If V.C. Andrews and Laurell K. Hamilton can be shelved in horror why not Koontz? Also, it allows me to tell myself that horror is a broader category than most people give it credit for.

Speaking of Koontz, I can't stand his writing, but two adaptations of his work (where he wrote the screenplay himself) are fantastic. I would highly recommend the movie version of Phantoms and the Fox miniseries of Intensity (so good I bought a bootleg when I realized it will never be released on DVD).

Oh, and Haute Tension/High Tension was plagiarized from Intensity, except for that godawful ending.

8ScribbleScribe
Editado: Dic 9, 2010, 10:18 am

Ironically I'm reading Phantoms right now. Why don't you like Dean Koontz as an author? I'm curious.

9PJGraham
Editado: Dic 9, 2010, 10:47 am

"If V.C. Andrews and Laurell K. Hamilton can be shelved in horror why not Koontz?"

Isn't that the truth! To be honest, a third of what gets put into my local bookstore's Horror section is really just supernatural romance. Nothing scary about them.

I've never actually read Koontz because none of his book summaries ever sounded frightening. Sounds like I'm not missing anything.

10jseger9000
Editado: Dic 9, 2010, 11:34 am

#8 - Why don't you like Dean Koontz as an author?

Something about his 'voice', I mean his actual choice of words, just gets on my nerves. Even when I've read introductions he wrote for others he bugs me.

I've read Darkfall, The Face of Fear and Intensity and none of them were bad, but the writing irritated me.

It has nothing to do with quality as I like Richard Laymon and he writes the same dreck as Koontz.

11ScribbleScribe
Dic 12, 2010, 3:23 pm

So, I just finished another Dean Koontz book Phantoms, which brings my total up to 33 of his books that I've read since i was 16 (I'm 22 now).

I just counted and there is around 26-28 of his books still in print that I haven't read. I feel frustrated. Like it's never going to end. -_-

Every time I look at my bookshelf i'm like "wow I have so much more to read..."

This isn't even counting the 25 or so books of his that are out of print and he still keeps writing. Awesome.

I think I'm getting close to needing a break from him and reading other stuff for a while before coming back to him.

12jseger9000
Editado: Dic 12, 2010, 11:52 pm

#11 - Besides Koontz, what horror writers do you like? We could give you a ton of suggestions.

13tjm568
Dic 13, 2010, 8:54 am

I stopped reading Koontz some years ago. I really liked his books when I was in high school (I am 42 now) but at some point they started to get too formulaic. That being said, there is every possibility he has gotten better since I quit. The last one I read was about evil insurance companies and some wierd guy who was into sex but didn't like to be touched and rubber bed sheets. Don't remember the name. Anyway, are there later books by Koontz you would recommend? I would certainly give him another try and I am sure there are lots of his books since the last one I read.

14ScribbleScribe
Dic 13, 2010, 12:51 pm

Actually, I have a hunch that his Frankenstein series might be good. I havent read any of those books though.

And I just picked up a non-horror book, Far From The Madding Crowd.

I am going to try and read all of H.P. Lovecraft's works and will try to read more Stephen King eventually and maybe some Brian Keene.

What horror books are your favorite Jseger, out of curiousity.

15jseger9000
Dic 13, 2010, 1:55 pm

#14 - My favorite is Stephen King. He is leagues beyond any other horror author in terms of sheer talent as a writer.

I also like Peter Straub (who is close to King) and Bentley Little (though I haven't read his latest stuff).
If you are looking for recs from these guys, I would say:

King: Try 'Salem's Lot. Hugely influential and for very good reason and spooky. Misery and It are good ones as well. And there's The Eyes of the Dragon if you want to see him try something wildly different and succeed.

Straub: Ghost Story is the best place to start. It's his most famous book and hands down his best. Koko and Floating Dragon are two others that I liked.

Little: I'd recommend The Ignored (the first book of his that I'd read. At the time I had never seen anything like it) or The Summoning which is (amazongly) a vampire tale that is original. I also liked The Association and The Revelation.

With King, it's hard to find a dud (except for The Dead Zone and some of The Bachman Books).

Straub and Little are less consistant. It is possible to get off on the wrong foot with either of them (in particular, avoid The Hellfire Club by Straub and The Town or The Walking by Little).

16jseger9000
Dic 13, 2010, 1:59 pm

Oh yeah, and every horror reader should read some Lovecraft, because he is important. But for me a little of his stuff goes a long way. Read too much all in a gulp and his purple prose will become laughable and his feelings towards... others will be disgusting.

17Locke
Dic 14, 2010, 1:47 am

#14 + 15: Oh, don't forget the british writer Ramsey Campbell if you are into quiet, psychological horror. I recommend The Parasite and The Influence. Don't know if these titles are easy to find in the U.S., though...

18tjm568
Dic 14, 2010, 10:10 am

#14-I appreciate the Little reccomendations. I read The Store and liked it, then some time later I read The Walking and didn't like it ay all. He is fairly prolific, so it is good to know some good ones.

I disagree with your assessment of The Dead Zone as a dud. I liked it a lot but to each his own. I would say the biggest dud he has put out is Gerald's Game.

Have you read If you could see me now bs Straub? I think Ghost Story was his best, but this one was next imo.

19Bookmarque
Dic 14, 2010, 1:48 pm

I completely disagree about The Hellfire Club - I found it sublime. Horror proper it's not, but Straub's voice is heads and shoulders above the average genre writer. The way he puts sentences together and how they flow in a paragraph is wonderful and particularly stands out in this book.

20jseger9000
Editado: Dic 14, 2010, 6:53 pm

#17 - I see both The Parasite and The Influence in Half Price Books here in the States all the time. They are not available as new books though.

#18 - Bentley Little is extremely on again/off again. But when he's on, he's great. Aside from The Town and The Walking, I'd also recommend avoiding The Return.

As for The Dead Zone, I remember that the middle section about the Castle Rock murders felt wedged into the book. Like he had a good novella and then shoved a different good novella into the middle of it. If you ever reread The Dead Zone, imagine that the middle section were just summarized. Wouldn't it read better?

I'm reading (or rereading) my way through all of King's books, one a month and haven't yet hit Gerald's Game. But from my hazy memories, I can say that's another that isn't great. Neither is Rose Madder, Insomnia or Firestarter.

If You Could See Me Now and Shadowland are two Straub books that are supposed to be fantastic, but I haven't read them yet.

#19 - Oh, and I didn't mean to slam The Hellfire Club. I completely agree that Straub and King are on a whole different level. (Until they write together. The Talisman = blah!)

But The Hellfire Club is weak compared to the other Straub books I mentioned.

21Bookmarque
Dic 14, 2010, 8:27 pm

Shadowland is good, but I find it simplistic as an adult. I can't remember ever reading the blue rose novels, so I should find them.

22jseger9000
Dic 14, 2010, 8:37 pm

#21 - I can't remember ever reading the blue rose novels

I've only read Koko so far, but that one was very good. Like The Hellfire Club, not a horror novel as such, but a really memorable book that is still creepy.

23rtttt01
Dic 15, 2010, 5:27 pm

#2 and #3, the whole system of category sections in bookstores is entirely a marketing thing. Publishers and booksellers figure out where to position the book where they think it will get people's attention and sell. This has as much to do with what the writer has done before, the title, the cover etc. as it does what the "true" genre of the book is. Note too that the borders between genres are very blurry anyway, even without this marketing stuff going on.

24ScribbleScribe
Editado: Ene 3, 2011, 4:51 am

I just finished The Funhouse by Dean Koontz. Gave it a bad review. lol

I'm not sure why I like to read Dean Koontz if I give his books consistently mediocre revews and ratings. Eh, I promised myself I would read all his stuff in print and by this time it's comforting in an odd way to read his stuff.

25ScribbleScribe
Ene 4, 2011, 9:48 am

I don't know if anyone will laugh at me, but I've just figured out that the best part of Dean Koontz books is learning new vocabulary now.

I just got done reading another book of his (I'm flying through them now) called Shattered and I looked back at my electronic dictionary history (you should get one if you want to expand your vocabulary) and i counted 25 words that I looked up while reading it.

High score on the GREs here I come!

26jseger9000
Ene 4, 2011, 6:45 pm

You wanna read scary stuff and build your vocab? Try some H.P. Lovecraft. Cyclopean, stygian, affrighted...

I pick on him, but I ought to try some Lovecraft again. I never did read Cool Air.

27TheBentley
Ene 8, 2011, 10:57 am

I'm like jseger in that Koontz's style grates on my nerves, but I've found I do like the Odd Thomas books. I don't know if it's the first person narration (maybe the awkward phrasing is just easier to take when it's attributed to a character) of if it's just that he's improved some since I gave up on him years ago.

And there's a very fine line between suspense/thrillers and horror novels. From a publishers standpoint, it's always going to come down to "where are people looking when they're likely to choose this book?" If you go to one of those super-categorized bookstores (where romance, fantasy, horror, etc.) are all broken out onto their own shelves, the "fiction" shelves are dominated by people like Jodi Picoult and Ann Tyler (what I always think of as "book-club fiction). Koontz certainly doesn't belong there. He's a genre writer, for sure. And there usually isn't a "suspense" shelf. It's either mystery or horror, and of those two, he's more horror than mystery. A lot of it also comes down to internal publishing house issues, too. If you're published by a "horror house" or the "horror editor" at your publishing house, you're going to get shelved based on that.

By the way, when we had these discussions in grad school, we always compared it to zoology. We'd say, those biology people are lucky. If it has fur, but it still lays eggs, it can't be a mammal, but it can't be a bird, so they just call it a marsupial and go home. So these discussions usually ended with somebody saying, "That's it. It's a marsupial."

28Nightwater
Editado: Ene 21, 2011, 2:24 pm

I haven't read Koontz for awhile, and I do understand the criticisms. But I always appreciated his compassion and his humanity.

29gryeates
Jul 22, 2011, 4:59 pm

My favourite of Koontz's horror novels is The Mask. A recent one that I read a few years ago is Odd Thomas which was alright, it had some tropes and cliches but was well-written. I've never been a big fan of his so can't really judge but Odd Thomas was definitely not a horror novel and I've gotten the impression that he doesn't like to be seen as in that genre anymore.

30Todd_Russell
Editado: Jul 24, 2011, 9:35 pm

I enjoyed most Koontz books in the 80s. He had a string of good one word title horror books like Watchers Phantoms and Strangers. The 80s saw a lot of good horror and I'm trying to go back here and there and read what I missed.

31lesliej
Jul 24, 2011, 10:58 pm

I read Koontz in the late 80s, and found whatever I read forgettable. I read his Odd Thomas books a couple of years ago for some reason, and I liked them.

32jseger9000
Editado: Jul 26, 2011, 3:18 pm

#30 - The 80s saw a lot of good horror and I'm trying to go back here and there and read what I missed.

Yeah, I'm doing that too. love browsing through the horror section of Half Price Books, looking for those '80's gems.

Some of those covers are so cheesy they are downright embarrassing. And yet secretly I love them too.

33ScribbleScribe
Ago 2, 2011, 12:14 pm

#32: *giggles @ Jseger's guilty pleasure*