Miguel Cardigos Cardigos itibaren 8361 Hatzendorf, Avusturya
Tekrar okuduktan sonra, ilk kez daha da çok keyif aldım. İlk defa fark etmediğim bazı şeyler gördüm, bu son kitapta ipuçları olabilir. Gelene kadar bekleyemem!
The best Dean Koontz book ever! He uses dogs in his stories alot which I like, this one has a genetically altered dog with amazing intelligence. Only thing bad about his books is they are creepy as hell and you won't sleep easy afterwards! I read Koontz in the middle of the night and every little sound in the house scares me to death! He is a lot of fun to read during Halloween season!
The premise of this book must have seemed remarkably clever--and unusual--when it appeared in 1943. What if all the women are witches and keep their craft secret from their husbands? What if their husbands' success in the workplace--their good performance reviews, their promotions, their smallest political victories--are due to their spouses' spells and circles of protection? And what would happen if one of the men found out, and persuaded his wife to renounce magic? Many novels and films--and an infinity of TV dramas and sitcoms--have used Leiber's idea, but few of them have produced a book as absorbing and well plotted as this one. It is set in a small American college filled with pseudo-gothic architecture (keep your eye on those gargoyles--they may be important later!) and where the petty politics are so nasty they remind me of an old joke: "Why are academic politics so vicious?" "Because the stakes are so small." For the first half of the book, the premise pretty much writes itself as we observe the harrying of nice young sociology prof Norman Saylor and his wife Tansy--poor, bare forked animals deprived of the comforts of witchcraft. It is then that the book becomes even more interesting. Norman casts a spell at the behest of an endangered Tansy, and he completes it on time--well, almost on time, and then. . . Go read the book for yourself.