Dean Koontz and Stephen King: Two Authors, Two Styles, One Chill
However, they are both very different writers, both in style and plot. A Stephen King novel can rarely be truly compared to a Dean Koontz novel. But they both affect me. How are they so different, and yet so alike? That is the question I seek to answer with this article.
One of the differences between Stephen King and Dean Koontz is the subject matter their plots tend to revolve around. Dean Koontz has many books that involve genetic manipulation and enhancement. He also deals with the 'other side' in a lot of his books, with things like ghosts, and spirits.
Part of what can be so chilling about his books is his revelations of the human soul. In his books, the greatest of evils, the most horrifying of monsters, is the dark side of the soul that lies in every human being. Whether it is the minds of the people who invented and carried out genetic experiments, and accidentally created a monster, or people with great powers, who give in to their dark side, the true enemy, the one behind it all, is that dark voice in the mind, the devil on your shoulder.
Stephen King dwells less on what is inside, and more on what is outside. His monsters are from the other side of the galaxy, from another dimension, or are simply there, sometimes unexplained, sometimes known, but always physical. His creatures and enemies are the fears of the inner child in all of us, the creature under the bed, or the monster in the closet. He captures this, not only in the look and feel of the monsters, but also in the unbelievable feel of it all, just like the child's futile attempts to convince his parents of the monsters existence.
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Did You Know?
Kathy Bates and Drew Barrymore are the only actors to participate in more than one movie based on Stephen King's books.
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