Fear Nothing
Fear Nothing
Christopher Snow is the best-known resident of 12,000-strong Moonlight Bay, California. This is because 28-year-old Chris has xeroderma pigmentosum (XP)—a light-sensitivity so severe that he cannot leave his house in daylight, cannot enter a normally-lit room, cannot sit at a computer. Chris’s natural element is the night, and his parents, both academics, chose to live in Moonlight Bay because in a small town Chris can make the nightscape his own—roaming freely through the town on his bike, surfing in the moonlight, exploring while most people sleep.
But Chris’s brilliant mother, a scientist, was killed in a car accident 2 years ago, and as the book opens his father, Steven Snow, is dying of cancer; Chris’s protected life is abou
List Price: $ 7.99
Price: $ 2.14
Related Chris Isaak Products





Entertaining, good characters,
As a long time Dean Koontz fan, I can attest to the fact that he can be very hit or miss. While I wouldn’t necessarily call Fear Nothing a total hit/blockbuster, it was one of the best Koontz that I have read in a while. Those familiar with Koontz, but leery of his irregularity will not be disappointed with this novel.
I won’t bother going through the plot again, as so many other reviewers have done quite well. I will just say that the plot was sufficiently suspenseful to keep me turning pages and happily entertained. The characters in this book, though, are really the best parts. Christopher Snow, a man with a serious disease that makes him deathly allergic to light is not only sweet, but funny as well. His friend Bobby, the coolest of all possible surfer dudes, is hysterical and philisophical at the same time. You really won’t be able to help liking these characters.
Unlike in some other novels, Koontz maintains his talent for strong description and backstory, without getting into long-winded tangents that put readers to sleep.
Overall, I say Fear Nothing was quite fun, entertaining, and a pleasure to read. I cannot wait to get my hands on a copy of Seize the Night, the next book in the Christoper Snow saga. I highly recommend this book to all who enjoy suspenseful reading and likable, funny characters.
Was this review helpful to you?
|Ready for the third installment of this clan,
This books is one of D.K’s greatest, along with it’s sequal, Seize the Night. I highly reccomend these novels, although you may have to heavily rely on the suspension of disbelief to get through it. The commradare between these three friends, (four, if you count the dog) is wonderfully entertaining. The writing in this book is funnier than in most of Koontz’s others. I found myself laughing out loud on several occasions. Thats not to say anything about the suspense this book is filled with. My work performance suffered after late nights with this book. An incredible read!
Was this review helpful to you?
|Moonlight Bay Revisited,
Although not as suspenseful as “Midnight”, “Fear Nothing” is a great addition to the Koontz Moonlight Bay saga. The basic plot concerns Christopher Snow, who suffers from a pigmentation disorder (‘XP’) that prevents him from venturing outside in the daylight. This disorder confines Snow to a nocturnal existance (described poetically in several sections by Snow) and limits his contact with the ‘normal’ people in his community. However, if you read “Midnight”, Koontz’s 1980s novel, you know that very few people are ‘normal’ in Moonlight Bay! Snow’s parents die separately but mysteriously, and when Snow witnesses his father’s body in the hospital”s “cold room” being replaced with that of a transient — sans eyes and badly beaten — he knows something’s terribly wrong. What follows is a fast-paced nighttime adventure that introduces the reader to Orson, Snow’s very intelligent dog (more intelligent than we think, due to some ‘enhancement’ done at a supposedly closed military base); Bobby, his ‘surfer dude’ friend who is so laid back that it takes the “monkeys of the apocalypse” to worry him; and Sasha, Snow’s girlfriend who is more than she seems, especially when the aforementioned monkeys attack Bobby’s beachfront house at the end of the novel. The only criticism I have is that Koontz makes no mention of the previous events of his central coast community — some reference to the other biological experiments of “Midnight” would have been nice. “Fear Nothing” does not go into the depth of the genetic research that “Midnight” does, but makes up for it with a protagonist who is funny, intelligent, poetic, and very human. My suggestion for reading this novel is to do what I did: read “Fear Nothing”, then go straight into “Seize the Night”, which takes place only a month after the events in “Fear Nothing” conclude. The stories make more sense, and frankly, could have been combined into one novel.
Was this review helpful to you?
|