Frankenstein: The Dead Town (Frankenstein, 5)

Image of Frankenstein: The Dead Town
Author(s): 
Release Date: 
December 1, 2011
Publisher/Imprint: 
Bantam
Pages: 
340
Reviewed by: 

“Mr. Koontz is truly a master tale spinner and in Frankenstein: The Dead Town he is at his best. And that’s saying a lot!”

Seems like there is a new trend in wrapping up great, fantastic literary journeys. The folks at Warner Brothers wisely split the last J. K. Rowling Harry Potter book, The Deathly Hallows, into two truly amazing movies; the finale a superb adaptation of the book’s climatic ending.

Likewise, writer Dean Koontz went deliriously overboard in relating the final conflict between the mad scientist Victor Frankenstein and his pathos filled creation, the so called “monster” now known as Deaucalion and offered it to his legion of fans in two parts. Frankenstein: The Dead Town is a truly fitting resolution to not only the first part of the narrative, Lost Souls, but also to the entire five book series.

One of the common traits of most successful pulp writers today is that they are prolific. The tons of words they produce daily is staggering and would make the old pulp writers proud. Author Koontz is no exception in this ability. Whereas being fast does not assure quality, only a professional competency his readers have come to expect. Of all his series, the new Frankenstein books are easily some of his most enjoyable action heavy offerings yet.

In book four, Lost Souls, the town of Rainbow Falls, Montana, was being invaded by clones created with super nano-technology in a hidden missile silo long abandoned by the military. The twisted genius behind this assault on humanity was the surviving clone of the first Victor Frankenstein; his goal, the complete eradication of all life, human, plant and animal, on the planet. Battling him at every step is Deucalion, that stitched together protagonist; but in this last book, The Dead Town, he is a nearly indestructible superman who has developed a truly beautiful soul and is determined to fowl his mad creator and save the world.

The fun of Frankenstein: The Dead Town and the previous volume, is the eclectic band of town citizens, all of them unique, eccentric characters in their own right, who ultimately band together as Deucalion’s army and bravely aid him this apocalyptic battle that has the fate of all mankind resting on its outcome.

Mr. Koontz is truly a master tale spinner and in Frankenstein: The Dead Town he is at his best. And that’s saying a lot!