Ratings9
Average rating3.3
Series
1 primary book3 released booksAshley Bell is a 3-book series with 1 primary work first released in 2015 with contributions by Dean Koontz.
Reviews with the most likes.
BLUF: Good book for those who like to love their characters and for those who are able to remove their Dean Koontz expectations. (Good book, but not the Dean Koontz most of us adore.)
I was provided a copy of this book from netgalley.com in exchange for an honest review
My Background: I love Dean Koontz. He is all I read during high school and I kept reading him until Relentless, which I fully believe wasn't written by the bestseller and turned me off enough that I have been fearful to read Dean Koontz since. (Then, after five years, I picked up By the Light of the Moon, which made me even more fearful to revisit the books I absolutely adore from him.) I'm trying to say that, while Koontz is my first love, or relationship has been distant for quite some time now. Yet, I couldn't resist wanting to revisit our relationship.
Plot: Ashley Bell follows the story of Bibi Blair. Bibi (pronounced BeeBee) is a lover of life and an avid writer. Bibi suffers a stroke, which leads to a diagnosis of a very rare, very malicious strain of cancer. Two days and a visit from an unknown being later, and Bibi is inexplicably clear of cancer. As a gift, her parents present her a reading from a psychic, who soon shares that Bibi was spared in order to safe the life of another, Ashley Bell.
Review: Ashley Bell is a good book, but it doesn't live up to the standards we hold for Dean Koontz. Although one could argue that there are too many run-on sentences, Ashley Bell is well written and keeps the reader entranced. The story itself is interesting, but it lacks the suspense, horror, and mystery that we love and have come to expect from Koontz.
Bibi should be a likeable character, but I wasn't a big fan. That said, I can't pinpoint what exactly bothered me. Honestly, it could even be the fact that every character was focused on her and her only. I realize this is stupid of me. Given that we are taken through this book on her thoughts, it's not a surprise and is very realistic that everything is about her, and I understand that. Like I said, I can't quite explain my feeling. I felt that she thought she was smarter than everyone else and that she expected information from other people without offering anything in return (even when they asked). My tweaks aren't likely to be your tweaks though and, which it bothered me in certain portions of the book, it didn't take away from my fondness of the story.
Like I mention above, the story doesn't have the suspense, horror, or mystery that a reader would expect when picking up a book by Dean Koontz. This book isn't a thriller and it won't scare you. There are times were your heart is paused, hoping that the characters will soon know what we know, but overall, there is little suspense. There is mystery in Ashley Bell, but there is nothing for the reader to guess about – we can only continue through the story and be directed through the mystery.
For all these complaints against the “Dean Koontz Standard”, I found the story itself is intriguing. I dreaded the face that I only had an hour or two at a time to read this story – I wanted to finish it all in one sitting. I enjoyed the few twists in the book and, for the most part, I enjoyed the balance between realism and paranormal.
Overall, I think this is a compelling read and good for those who like to love their characters.
I'm going to step away from my usual style of reviewing for this story. Mainly because there are so many twists and turns, reality, fantasy and pure imagination wrapped up in a Deen Koontz novel that it would be very easy to give away spoilers. So instead, let me give you my thoughts without a tease of the story of my own – we'll let the Cover Description provide that part.
Ashley Bell is a big book, told in small chapters. Many readers won't like that style as the different parts of the story are spoon fed to us in brief snatches of what is happening.
There are times when the reader will have to totally suspend belief, far more than the average needed for any suspense, mystery or thriller novel. This is Koontz's style. The unbelievable wrapped up in everyday life.
Bibi is a compelling character on a mission. I enjoyed the characters in this story. They were well rounded and believable, even in the times when the reader must suspend belief in order to continue.
There will be readers who will love Ashley Bell. And those who won't. I'm falling somewhere in the middle. I enjoyed the story, felt it went on a bit too long in some areas. But for the time I was reading it I was caught up in the story and really, that is all any story is supposed to do. Entertain us for a while.