I'd like to start this review by thanking Dean Koontz for writing this book. It isn't perfect, and it has its flaws, but it got me through a very difficult time in my life recently that I wasn't sure I was going to make it through. Some years ago, Don DeLillo's excellent novel Underworld similarly got me through another difficult time. Sometimes, when we're alone, or when we're enduring a difficult situation, books can be there for us. They can provide solace. They can relieve anxiety. Above all, they allow us to just get lost in a good story. And sometimes, that's all you need...
So thank you, Mr. Koontz, and Mr. DeLillo. These two books will always hold a special place in my heart, and I will cherish them always.
Getting to the book itself, I've heard The Voice of the Night described as a coming-of-age story for its young protagonist Colin Jacobs. But it fundamentally is not. We don't see Colin grow up or reach adulthood in this story, which I think occurs over part of just a single summer (the summer of 1980, to be exact) in Santa Leona, California, where Colin and his mother have recently moved. Colin is portrayed as an introverted nerd who likes comic books, regular books, horror movies, and monster movies. I like and identify with him quite a bit in this respect. Colin soon meets Roy Borden, who is everything Colin is not: popular, handsome, physically strong, and far more sexually advanced than Colin.
For reasons Colin does not understand, Roy decides he wants Colin to be his friend, and at first things seem to be going okay. Colin has never really had a best friend before, and Roy gives him an opportunity to be a manager on the school football team and helps him come out of his shell a bit and think about things in a more mature way. But it soon becomes evident that something is wrong with Roy. He talks about girls in a perverted way, and keeps trying to convince Colin that he's killed animals before and that he likes to kill. Colin thinks it's just a game Roy is playing, so when Roy makes the extraordinary claim that he's killed other people as well, Colin doesn't buy it. But is there any truth to Roy's claims? And if so, what is Roy's motive? Why is he the way he is, and is Colin himself potentially in danger?
I enjoyed this one, and as of this writing, I consider it to be the best Dean Koontz book I've read to date. The book starts out really slow, with Colin not accepting that Roy really is a psychopath and that he really does want to kill other people until page 179, over halfway through the book. Until then, there must have been half a dozen times where Roy talked about committing one murder or another, and Colin just thought it was "a game" the whole time. What kid plays a game where he tries to convince you that he wants to kill people? And if he is playing such a game, he obviously has mental issues, so why are you raving about how he's so amazing, he's the best friend you've ever had, etc. Colin is unbelievably naive in this respect, and I thought Koontz dragged that out a bit too much (okay, way too much).
I also thought Colin's mom not believing anything he says and instantly believing the narrative that he's really just crazy and addicted to drugs was completely ridiculous. Like, I get that you don't have that close of a relationship with your son, but you have a close enough relationship, and he's your son, for God's sake! Why would your default response not be to believe him when he makes such serious claims and tells you he's in real danger? Any real mother would, so the fact that Colin's mom didn't seemed really far-fetched in this story. The more she didn't believe him as the book went on, the dumber and more unrealistic it appeared.
To the book's credit, Roy was a near-perfect depiction of a psychopath, and I found him to be a chilling nemesis. I also really liked Colin as a protagonist. Koontz's protagonists are usually these flat, dull, or insufferable people, but Colin had a lot of personality, and his character underwent a satisfying evolution by the end of the book, where he was brave and strong and stood up for himself, something he never would have done at the beginning of the book. The story was also a lot better than most Koontz books I've read so far, and though, similar to all his other books, you could probably cut 30-50 pages out of it, this one didn't bother me as much in that respect, because the underlying story was interesting and I was engaged in it.
Overall, this is a solid Dean Koontz book. I don't usually keep books below a four-star rating in my collection, and despite what the CAWPILE rating system says I'd rate this book 3.5 stars, but this one might be an exception. I liked it, and I might hold onto it. I wouldn't go as far as to recommend it, but with this being my sixth Koontz book, and the only one I've given a rating as high as 3.5 stars, you could certainly do worse if you're looking to check out his work.
CAWPILE rating:
Characters: 8.0
Atmosphere / Setting: 7.5
Writing Style: 7.0
Plot: 6.5
Intrigue: 6.5
Logic / Relationships: 6.0
Enjoyment: 7.0
= 48.5 total
÷ 7 categories = 6.92 out of 10
= 3 stars