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Prodigal Son by Dean Koontz
Prodigal Son by Dean Koontz







Prodigal Son by Dean Koontz

I enjoyed the characters of Carson and Maddison, but what most appealed to me was the yearning to be human that some of Frankenstein/Helios’s creations feel. There’s an interesting tie-in regarding autistic behavior and some of the creatures created by Victor Frankenstein, now re-named Victor Helios. Someone could probably write a dissertation about the literary, historical, and cultural significance of these three novels being set in New Orleans.Ĭarson’s autistic younger brother is under her care and at first you wonder if he’s included simply as a way to soften Carson’s edges as a character, but later you find he becomes an integral part of the plot.

Prodigal Son by Dean Koontz

I think the last book I read set in The Big Easy was probably Anne Rice’s Interview with a Vampire, which I read in the 80s. The last novel I read, Nevada Barr’s Burn was also set in New Orleans. It wasn’t an intentional choice because I didn’t even know Prodigal Son was set there. I just realized that this the second novel in a row that I read set in New Orleans. We don’t know why, but find out soon after his arrival in New Orleans where detectives Carson O’Connor and Michael Maddison are trying to find a serial killer who is removing body parts–both appendages and organs–from his victims.

Prodigal Son by Dean Koontz

Actually, he’s even a bit godlike and has taken the name Deucalion.Ī letter arrives at the monastery and Deucalion must leave. He’s spent 200 years growing, learning, and possibly becoming more human than most humans. He’s no longer the angry, uncontrolled monster of Shelley’s book or the movies. Synopsis (with some slight spoilers): Frankenstein’s monster is alive and well and living in a Tibetan monastery. City of Night 2005 (co-writer: Ed Gorman).Prodigal Son 2004 (co-writer: Kevin J.The newest addition to the series came out this spring. Prodigal Son is the first book in Koontz’s Frankenstein series. I was pleasantly surprised by the book’s depth of emotion and I had no idea that its structure is like a contemporary mystery/thriller. This is one of those books that was on my radar since it came out six years ago.









Prodigal Son by Dean Koontz