One door away from heaven

681 pages

English language

Published Nov. 15, 2002 by Bantam Books.

ISBN:
978-0-553-58275-8
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OCLC Number:
50862952

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2 stars (5 reviews)

The number-one bestseller from "America's most popular suspense novelist" (The New York Times) is now in paperback. Following a missing family to the edge of America, Michelina Bellsong finds herself in a place she never knew existed, a place of terror, wonder, and shattering revelation. What awaits her will change her life and the lives of everyone she knows, if she can find the key to survival.

16 editions

Review of 'One door away from heaven' on 'Goodreads'

1 star

I remember (correctly? who knows!) liking Odd Thomas. ODAfH starts out fine, with three distinct storylines. Then it makes a slow, painful, nothing-but-cruel slog up to a wholly unsatisfying ending "tying" the three together. The only reason I finished it was because I was sure (?) Koontz was going to make the ending worth it. Big mistake!

The book, as a whole, was unrelentingly violent and cruel, as well as being repetitive and mind-bogglingly boring.

There is a particularly brutal and disgusting scene involving a pet snake about which this snake mom would have appreciated having a trigger warning.

Review of 'One door away from heaven' on 'Goodreads'

1 star

I remember (correctly? who knows!) liking Odd Thomas. ODAfH starts out fine, with three distinct storylines. Then it makes a slow, painful, nothing-but-cruel slog up to a wholly unsatisfying ending "tying" the three together. The only reason I finished it was because I was sure (?) Koontz was going to make the ending worth it. Big mistake!

The book, as a whole, was unrelentingly violent and cruel, as well as being repetitive and mind-bogglingly boring.

There is a particularly brutal and disgusting scene involving a pet snake about which this snake mom would have appreciated having a trigger warning.

Review of 'One door away from heaven' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

The odor of wish fulfillment is a little too strong around this book, affording plenty of opportunities for Koontz to stop the story and climb up on his soapbox about everything from God to assisted suicide to dogs to smart girls to rich people to "bosomy" broken babes. In Koontz's world, there is no such thing as nuance, so anyone who accepts assisted suicide is a baby-killing proponent of eugenics... and ranted over so ham-handedly that readers might start to think even the strawman has a point. A cast of puppets too obviously play out an elaborate set piece, and you'll probably find yourself increasingly skimming as the book goes on.

The many threads of story are overwhelming and jarring, too many characters to really care about, but his worst crime against words comes right at the peak of the climax: the villain suddenly takes a time-out for a half-dozen …

avatar for MxRemy

rated it

3 stars
avatar for Chetana

rated it

3 stars

Subjects

  • Missing children
  • Dysfunctional families
  • Female friendship
  • Unidentified flying object cults
  • Girls
  • Children with disabilities
  • Fiction
  • Protected DAISY