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 Reviewed by: The Rev 17th Sep 2001 
 


Anti-Man

Dean Koontz



Koontz' earlier work is inconsistent, and you're often taking a crapshoot when picking up one of his pre-horror novels. Anti-Man is one of the better ones, from the perspective of writing style-- it flows much more smoothly than many of his earlier works, without the repetition and one-sentence paragraphs that mar the early short stories and novels. The plot's a doozy, too-- a scientist has kidnapped, and is hiding, an android who's capable of healing the sick and raising the dead, who's supposed to be dismantled on sight by order of the government (when the world's overpopulated, after all, why would you WANT to heal the sick and raise the dead?). While the questions discussed and the answers revealed are very much the stuff of well-tread science-fictive paths, the treading is above average, leading almost to glimpses of Koontz' later brilliance.



See also
After the Last Race by Dean Koontz reviewed by The Rev
Dark of the Woods by Dean Koontz reviewed by The Rev
From The Corner of His Eye by Dean Koontz reviewed by Al
Odd Thomas by Dean Koontz reviewed by Bonnie
Soft Come the Dragons by Dean Koontz reviewed by The Rev
Time Thieves by Dean Koontz reviewed by The Rev