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Reviews for The big dark sky

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Those incredible coincidences Carl Jung dubbed synchronicities lie at the heart of Koontz’s latest—if it can be said to have a heart. Twenty-four years after the deaths of her mother and father only weeks apart drove her from Montana to live with her Aunt Katherine in Santa Fe, Joanna Chase hears a spectral voice bidding her return. At the same time, tech billionaire Liam O’Hara, who now owns Rustling Willows, the ranch where Joanna spent her childhood, hires Seattle PI Wyatt Rider to investigate a mysterious disturbance that spooked O’Hara’s family on a recent visit. And no wonder, for there’s no lack of spooky manifestations in the area. Embezzling chemist Harley Spondollar’s house collapsed moments after he stepped outdoors; Jimmy Alvarez, the childhood friend Joanna’s somehow forgotten despite his memorable birth defects, has been touched by dark forces; and Asher Optime, formerly associated with Xanthus Toller’s Restoration Movement, has branched out on his own quest to restore the planet to its natural balance by eliminating all humankind (the list of victims he’s abducted and killed so far stands at five). Eventually the oddball heroes, joined by good-guy hacker Kenny Deetle, his more-than-one-night-stand Leigh Ann Bruce, his wingman, Dr. Ganesh Patel, and Artimis Selene, Patel’s partner in the secret Project Olivaw who yearns to be more, make common cause against the odder-ball villains. But although Koontz repeatedly and oracularly invokes the awesome powers of synchronicity to explain the mesh of connections among the cast members, this remains very much a pickup ballgame, highly effective from scene to scene but in hindsight as evanescent as a mirage. A nonstop actioner with cosmic overtones painted in consistently broad strokes. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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