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The Forest of Lost Souls: A Novel

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A fearless woman, raised in the forest, fights against a group of powerful men in a novel about good versus evil, the enduring nature of myth, and the power of love by #1 New York Times bestselling author Dean Koontz.

Raised in the wilderness by her late great-uncle, Vida is a young woman with an almost preternatural affinity for nature, especially for the wolves that also call the forested mountains home. Formed by hard experience, by love and loss, and by the prophecies of a fortune teller, Vida just wants peace. If only nearby Kettleton County didn’t cast such a dark shadow.

It’s where Jose Nochelobo, the love of Vida’s life and a cherished local hero, died in a tragic accident. That’s the official story, but Vida has reasons to doubt it. The truth can’t be contained for long. Nor can the hungry men of power in Kettleton who want something too: that Vida, like Jose, disappear forever. One by one they come for her, prepared to do anything to see their plans through to their evil end. Vida is no less prepared for them.

Vida, the forest, and its formidable wonders are waiting. She will not rest until goodness and order have been restored.

393 pages, Hardcover

First published July 16, 2024

6718 people are currently reading
12403 people want to read

About the author

Dean Koontz

906 books39.6k followers
Acknowledged as "America's most popular suspense novelist" (Rolling Stone) and as one of today's most celebrated and successful writers, Dean Ray Koontz has earned the devotion of millions of readers around the world and the praise of critics everywhere for tales of character, mystery, and adventure that strike to the core of what it means to be human.

Dean, the author of many #1 New York Times bestsellers, lives in Southern California with his wife, Gerda, their golden retriever, Elsa, and the enduring spirit of their goldens, Trixie and Anna.

Facebook: Facebook.com/DeanKoontzOfficial
Twitter: @DeanKoontz
Website: DeanKoontz.com

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,011 reviews
Profile Image for John (JC).
617 reviews48 followers
October 9, 2024

Greed, conflict, persecution, alliances, betrayals, forgiveness, justice and good touch of the supernatural. These are the components of this book. Was it interesting? I had to force myself to put it down. It seems like the more I reveal of this writing, the more chance I might hit on a spoiler. Read this book with an open mind, enjoy the prose and most of all relax and let the story flow over you.
Profile Image for JJtheBookNerd.
110 reviews65 followers
November 8, 2025
Vida, a young woman in her late twenties, lives alone in a remote house in the middle of the forest. She lost both her parents as a child and was raised by her Uncle Ogden, whom she loved dearly.

Vida earns a living making jewellery—which her uncle taught her to do growing up—by panning for gems in a mine near her home. Her quiet life is disturbed when she notices somebody has started watching her. Vida seems to be at one with nature and has a sixth sense.

Deputy Nash Deacon comes to visit in an 'unofficial capacity' regarding his cousin Belden Bead. We're not initially told as to why. He gives Vida a concealed threat—she has something he wants. He then misuses his authority and starts to break into her house and leaves little things around in an effort to scare her.

A lot of the backstory seems to revolve around Vida's lost lover, Jose Nochelobo and how the circumstances of his death came to be and all of the shady people involved. This puts Vida in their crosshairs.

Some of the villain-type characters felt shoehorned in just for the sake of it; they added nothing to the story. However, I do wish Sam had been introduced earlier and had been more fleshed out; he seemed to have an interesting history and could have been a much stronger, more prominent character.

I enjoy a story that revolves around a strong woman, and Vida certainly had her work cut out for her in dealing with various men who wished her harm, whilst at the same time trying to find justice for her lost love.

I always like this Author's prose, and it's well written. However, anyone who's read the Author's work before knows they like to wax lyrical with ideologies that touch on the meaning of life, love and the world in general; this one seems to focus on the natural world and man's attempted destruction thereof. That's not a negative trait by any means, but it won't be to everyone's taste, and it can sometimes unnecessarily detract from the plot and make it feel more drawn out than it needs to be.

I liked it, but I wasn't engrossed in it. I thought the story started off much better than it ended. Whilst it's tagged as horror, I would say it falls more into the psychological thriller genre with minor supernatural elements.
Profile Image for Rain.
2,577 reviews21 followers
October 9, 2024
This book is a richly atmospheric and poetic experience. Reminiscent of the Koontz novels I loved as a teenager, yet filled with the wisdom of a more mature storyteller.
"You see beauty where others never can. You see it with something other than your eyes."
Koontz skillfully intertwines the mystical with a sharp critique of modern society, voicing his frustration over how people have become complacent, blindly following like lemmings. The story explores deep-rooted corruption at the highest levels, and how the majority of people remain oblivious to their own suffering.

At the heart of the story is Vida, a young woman who, for ten years, has labored in isolation after her uncle Ogden’s death at the age of 85. Only 18 when she lost him, she survives in their remote home, living off the land.

On the other side, we have the villain, an obsessive man who consumes 182 pills daily, vitamins, minerals, enzymes, and micronutrients, in his obsessive pursuit of immortality.

Murders/mysteries
Small town corruption
Magical realism
Dogs (because of course!)
Slight love story
HEA

There is a hint of a love story, but no on-page romance or real connection.

As the novel ends, it left me reflecting on the weight of truth:
“Truth can’t be repressed forever. It’ll come out.”

“But if it does, most people will still believe what isn’t true, because the truth is heavy to carry compared to the lightness of a lie.”
Four stars instead of five because while I absolutely loved the first half, the ending seemed to lose some of its emotional depth and heart.
Profile Image for Jim C.
1,779 reviews36 followers
May 31, 2025
This book is about a woman, Vida, who lives out in nature and basically cuts herself off from society. She has recently lost her fiancée by accident. She soon discovers that there is more to his death than an accident.

I liked this book but I was never fully grasped by it. I believe there are several reasons to that. One of them is this novel could not decide what genre it wanted to be. At times it was a thriller while also being a character study book. It also touched up the supernatural and fantasy genre. While a mish mash of genres can work this felt like it was on the outside looking in. I especially felt this way when it used different tropes from these genres. I like these tropes but the use of them here became enigmatic as I found myself wondering why to some of them. We did not get an explanation and we just had to accept them. This happened for the characters. I liked them but I could never become enthralled by them for this reason. I could say the same for the story. I liked it but never fully engrossed. I did like the ending a little more as the first half of the book was a mystery of where we were going with this. I will give a warning to readers who think that Koontz gets wordy with his books. This one takes it up another level. It is like he heard those complaints and decided to give readers something to complain about.

All in all there is nothing really special here. It was an enjoyable read but it comes down to that this was a middle of the road read. I think the problem was that it was all over the place and undecided with its identity. I like the various places it went but I sort of wish it emphasized one of them. I sort of reminds me of today's music. I might hear something and say that is a good song. But that is it. I would never consider the song remarkable or unforgettable. That is how I feel about this novel. I liked it but within a couple of months I will probably forget about it.
Profile Image for Scott Rhee.
2,310 reviews161 followers
October 5, 2025
The natural world may be full of dangers and violence, but it does not compare to the world of men. Nature has a balance, one unsullied by morality or a lack of one, whereas men have no qualms about destroying the world around them for profit and greed, the very world that they themselves need to survive. Men are contradictory that way.

Vida does not live in the world of men. She is of the world of men, of course, but she has foresworn the petty hatreds and mindless, wanton violence of humanity. She has tried to live a life in balance with the natural world around her, and, for the most part, she has succeeded.

Then, one day, the man she loves and plans to marry is taken from her, violently, by the scheming and profit-driven motives of evil men. And, she learns, they plan on taking much more, as their plans involve the destruction of one of the last beautiful places on Earth. This, she can not allow.

Thus begins the fantastic new novel by Dean Koontz, "The Forest of Lost Souls", a contemporary western with flourishes of magic realism and dark fantasy, as well as the horror that Koontz fans come to expect.

The horror in this novel is not a supernatural horror. It is the horror of the evils of the modern world: rampant technological growth, environmental destruction, unchecked capitalism, the blatant apathy of society in the face of evil. It is the horror of watching---and doing nothing---as the natural world slips away at the steady encroachment of more shopping plazas, oil pipelines, strip-mining, deforestation, urbanization, overpopulation.

Koontz has written one of the most intense and suspenseful western action thrillers I have read in a while, and he has created a heroine for the ages in Vida.

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32 reviews
October 6, 2024
Lost In Words

Somewhere in the book is perhaps a good story. BUT it is covered up by page after page of so much unnecessary and boring details. Not a fan of this one.
Profile Image for "Avonna.
1,461 reviews589 followers
October 23, 2024
Check out all my reviews at: https://www.avonnalovesgenres.com

THE FOREST OF LOST SOULS by Dean Koontz is a slow burn suspense/thriller featuring a battle between a female champion of the natural world, an oligarch who only loves money, and a cast of characters and animals both spiritual, paranormal, and very human.

Vida has always had an otherworldly connection to the natural world. When a fortune teller comes to Kettleton County, Vida is drawn to her. The prophecies she receives impact and prepare her for a future full of danger and loss, but also love and peace if she survives.

This story has many of Mr. Koontz’s recurring tropes and yet he always finds a new way to pull me in and emotionally connect me to the main protagonist. Vida is a strong young the woman connected her entire life to the natural world, both spiritually and with a shade of the paranormal. Her special gifts are recognized by the fortune teller and are used to protect the world she loves. There are mysterious wolves, an albino mountain lion, a war veteran with search and rescue dogs, and a Native American couple who all help Vida against the invasion of an oligarch and his minions who plan to destroy her beloved mountains.

The writing is full of evocative language not usually found in genre style suspense/thriller novels which had me more involved with the story’s themes rather than just rushing to the crime plot climax, but I was disappointed that after so much imagery and intrigue, the climax seemed a bit rushed.

Overall, Vida is a memorable protagonist, and this story is worth the read.
Profile Image for De Conlin.
4 reviews2 followers
October 20, 2024
Dean Koontz has been one of my favorite authors for most of my life. Several of his books hold top 10 books I’ve ever read. Unfortunately, his writing has gone down so far, I have to make myself finish them and it breaks my heart. The characters aren’t engaging. The plot doesn’t hold me. The book is hard to follow and Koontz seems to just use big words because he can.
Profile Image for Lynn.
917 reviews28 followers
October 20, 2024
The Woman Who Runs with Wolves

After having been orphaned, Vida goes to live with her great uncle in a self-sustaining cabin in the mountains. Vida learns everything she needs to live off of the land and with the land as she grows up. While still very young, she visits a seer who tells her almost nothing and yet everything she needs to survive the coming storm.

Once again, Koontz has written a story that is both terrifying and beautiful. This story is exciting and weaves just enough of a supernatural aura to keep it mysterious and entertaining. I loved it.
Profile Image for David.
358 reviews5 followers
September 27, 2024
3 stars. Why the middling review? I loved parts of this book, but overall it was just ok. What did I love? Koontz is at his best when he writes about individuals with god complexes. They are completely arrogant and delusional. The best parts of this novel were when our main character, Vida, matched wits with both Nash the sheriff and Bead the drug kingpin. Great chapters with lots of tension. The weak parts of the book were how the other characters were merely plot devices, with not fully fleshed out characters. Why do we care about Sam? Why do we hate the rich bad guy? Who are the two characters at the end who help Vida and Sam?

I felt Koontz threw a bunch of stuff (characters, events, etc.) without having a fully realized cohesive story.
Profile Image for Craig.
6,333 reviews179 followers
February 13, 2025
I was a little disappointed by this one. If it had been written by someone unfamiliar to me, I probably would have enjoyed it more because I wouldn't have had high expectations. It's a story about a young woman who's been raised by her uncle in a secluded area after the death of her parents. Much is made about how secluded her existence has always been, but she somehow came up with an improbable fiancé who's got a very public lifestyle. He dies giving a speech against tearing down the forest to build a wind farm and a housing development and she learns his death wasn't an accident, so she begins a crusade for justice. There are some parallels and references to Greek, Christian, and Native American mythology and philosophy that get a little muddled and some semi-supernatural events (she hangs out with wolves and knew a fortune-teller who was the Real Thing, for example). It's a pretty good, straight-forward plot, but it moves way too slowly. Koontz's language and descriptions are lovely, but this time it seems that every paragraph is weighted and slowed by too much florid gingerbread. A typical line, from page 254: "This broad swath of open land is prime hunting ground for raptors, and even as the sun ascends into its fullness, what might be a red-tailed hawk appears in the distance, while a larger ferruginous hawk kites overhead in a widening gyre." It's a pretty picture and a nicely constructed line, but once in a while you can just say that Vida looked up that morning and saw a couple of birds. Too much is too much is overload: I would've liked the novel a lot more if it had been twenty-percent shorter.
Profile Image for Димитър Цолов.
Author 35 books423 followers
December 9, 2025
Запазва се тенденцията от последните няколко срещи с произведения на Кунц. Книгата се чете бързо, главите са кратки, действието е скоростно, напук на тегавото и мъчещо се да убие инерцията сегашно време (винаги налагащо ми известна адаптация в началото); имаме интересна история с доволна щипка мистика и явни трилърни нишки, но това, което започва много да ме възпалява при автора е абсолютно безумният контраст на черното и бялото - добрите персонажи могат да ти докарат диабет, толкова са захаросани, лошите пък вършат наистина безобразни неща, а действията и на едните и другите нерядко са лишени от всякаква вътрешна логика, само и единствено в името на успешната развръзка. От друга страна - хубаво е да има и такива творби, които четеш без да се притесняваш, знаейки, че справедливостта ще възтържествува и накрая всички гадняри ще си получат заслуженото 🙂
3,5/5 ⭐️
Profile Image for Ray Palen.
2,006 reviews55 followers
September 28, 2024
4 1/2 Stars

Dean Koontz has shown in his half-century of writing that he is capable of almost anything. He jokes in a recent on-line interview about his genre-crossing career as well as the image of an eerie albino mountain lion named Azrael who appears in the first chapter of his latest novel, the mystical and suspenseful THE FOREST OF LOST SOULS.

If you are a long-time Koontz reader like I am then you will recognize many of his recurring tropes in this novel like mysterious animals, young people with special gifts who are in peril, and evil government or corporate entities looking to impose their bad karma on the natural world around them. These familiar plot devices are all used very effectively in this story centered on a young woman named Vida who lives off the grid in the mountain cabin where her Uncle raised her. She is at one with the forest and all its inhabitants, but the real world just finds a way of crashing her party and seeking to eliminate what they cannot understand or control.

Uncle Ogden raised her off the grid and taught her how to make life in the forest work. The only real example of the world outside of their private garden of Eden is a library filled with a myriad of books, most of which Vida has read. Vida’s life is not all calmness and serenity for she has known pain and tragedy. First, the untimely loss of her parents and many years later her Uncle Ogden. The biggest blow was the murder of her fiancé, a High School principal named Jose Nochelobo, who was killed by those opposing him as he stood on the steps of the Kettleton town courthouse protesting the billionaire business seeking to come in and destroy their local wilderness in the name of corporate greed and profit.

Kettleton is not a nice place anymore and has been corrupted not only by corporate outsiders but also the criminal underworld that many of its residents are involved in. One of the heads of this criminal syndicate was a really bad man named Belden Bead who somehow disappeared from the world after a run-in with Vida on her property. She defended herself against him and he ended up shooting himself and bleeding out. She took her big digger rig and buried him and his car on her wide expanse of land. Now, some time later, someone else has come to her home from Kettleton seeking revenge and other nefarious designs on Vida.

Deputy Deacon was kin to Belden Bead and knows she had something to do with his disappearance. He blackmails Vida into what he calls submission, whereby she stays alive and he comes by whenever he wants for food, sex, and whatever else he wishes to subject her to all for his silence about what she did. It is one of the highlights of the novel to see her turn the tables on Deacon and ‘disappear’ him as well. However, this time it will come at a high price as there are many others both from the criminal and corporate side of Kettleton who aim to pay her a visit and make her pay once and for all.

Vida is not someone to be trifled with and has a sense of harmony with the flora and fauna in the forest that includes the great wolf named Lupo and his pack. The eventual finale which pits the evil representatives of Kettleton against Vida and a man named Sam, who she was destined to meet as per a visit to a seer when she was young, is tremendously exciting and some of the most suspenseful writing I have ever seen from Dean Koontz.

There are many great messages in THE FOREST OF LOST SOULS and Vida is a character you can really relate to and root for. My favorite line from the novel comes from the mind of Vida and it also provides the impetus for the novel’s title: ‘In her experience, it is civilization, riven by human arrogance and greed and envy, that is, at its worst, a forest of lost souls.’

Reviewed by Ray Palen for Book Reporter
Profile Image for Nancie Lafferty.
1,832 reviews12 followers
August 3, 2025
The foretellings of a mystic and the conflict between greed, power and corruption (evil) and love, nature and truth (good) are the basis of this story of a small town on the brink of massive change. A bit “out there”, but an interesting and entertaining read.
22 reviews
October 10, 2024
No true substance

This is the second Dean Koontz book that I've scored lowly and I really hate doing it to my childhood favourite author but, apart from his beautifully descriptive narrative, the story has no bones. It flitters between far too many characters that are totally unconnected and the story line is long and tedious. I kept waiting for the sneaky Koontz premise that just hits me and instantly all was wrapped up in a big, red bow but alas no bow appears. Beautifully written nothingness.
Profile Image for Melissa Bennett.
952 reviews15 followers
February 12, 2025
I was attracted to this book in the beginning. A life of living off the land, peace and quiet, nature. Sounded like a dream. Then the bad guys arrive. The story just turned corny for me after that. The characters were too cookie-cutter. The good guys were so angelic that they probably were walking on water. The bad guys were too over-the-top evil. So much so that it was just cheesy. Ended up taking away from the story itself.
Profile Image for Brendon Lowe.
413 reviews99 followers
April 23, 2025
A story about nature, corruption, power, murder and wisdom. It was a decent enough read but overly wordy for Koontz, and the plot is not that engaging.
925 reviews13 followers
October 3, 2024
The Forest of Lost Souls is another excellent Koontz thriller about a seemingly ordinary young woman with an extraordinary connection to the natural world forced into a confrontation against evil. In this case, evil takes the form of a morally corrupt tech billionaire who will stop at nothing (including murder) in his effort to achieve greater power and wealth.

The love of Vida's life (Jose Nochelobo) is a beloved high school teacher and football coach who opposes a company's plans to build a massive project in a natural wilderness near town. When she discovers that his tragic death was anything but the accident that it appeared to be, she begins to investigate. But her effort to find the truth draws the ire of the company's owner, an evil tech billionaire who seeks to eliminate her interference.

As a child, Vida was told by a local fortune teller that she was destined to be the defender of the natural world. Although much of what the seer told her made no sense to the young girl, as the predictions begin to become true, she becomes increasingly aware of her growing connection to, and power over, the natural world.

Accompanied by a mysterious pack of wolves and a physically and emotionally scarred Afghanistan war veteran, Vida runs from the increasingly dangerous men and advanced technology sent to kill her. Seeking refuge in the natural environment where her powers give her an advantage, she is forced into a final confrontation to save the wilderness, a sacred Native American burial ground, and the lives of her troop of human and animal compatriots.

Koontz is a master storyteller, and this haunting "supernatural" thriller is filled with many recurring themes from past books. The ultimate triumph of good over evil and the sacrifices that good people must make to defeat the evil in their midst, heroes with exceptional powers that even they don't always understand, the duality of a humanity that can be both stunningly corrupt and yet heroic and courageous.

As always, his writing is fluid and engaging and he has a way of making the reader care about and believe in the characters that he creates no matter how outrageous the plot details. His villains are often absurdly one-dimensional bad guys, but here his desire is to skewer the moral corruption of the "tech bros" and big businesses' obsession with profits over what is morally right. But in this book, as in most of his other stories, he creates an everyday hero that both shows the best of humanity and inspires us as readers to want to be better people.

His plots can be formulaic, but they are unputdownable and consistently thrilling. This isn't the best of his work (the Odd Thomas series gets my vote for his most extraordinary writing), but it is an excellent, compelling, and captivating story. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Dave.
972 reviews19 followers
July 1, 2025
Koontz has a knack for creating very colorful 3 dimensional characters in his books both of the protagonist and especially on the antagonist scale and this book is no exception. He creates some solid good ones and the main character is Vida, who lives off in the wilderness and both street and book smart. The story involves nature, mysticism, spirituality, animals, and plenty of death and violence as only the master of suspense knows how to deliver. Koontz creates many guys to hate in this book as well from the psycho billionaire mastermind Boschvark to his legion of evil minions doing his bidding like Belden Bead and Nash Deacon to name two greatly written and described heels.
Koontz does write about a fascinating female side character named Wendy who could probably star in her own book or series down the road.
There is even a Richard Brautigan reference in it on page 342 garnering another star in my rating as Brautigan remains a favorite author of mine.
11 reviews
October 7, 2024
Hard to read

Why do we need to know every tiny detail of decor or surroundings. Without all that fluff this was probably a 20 page book.
Profile Image for Jannelies (living between hope and fear).
1,306 reviews195 followers
February 1, 2025
Long before the internet I bought a Dean Koontz novel and I was immediately hooked. He’s one of the very few authors I still prefer to read in print. Then, I was dependent on fanzines and my local bookstore to see whether there was a new title out. Now, of course, all his work is just at the tip of my fingers. I own more than 50 titles by this great author – and then suddenly, I lost interest when the Odd series began to come out. I don’t know what it is but I just didn’t like those books. And so I lost track of his work until more or less recently. I’ve just finished The Forest of Lost Souls and my oh my, how I enjoyed not only this title, but also the feeling that I may have missed many great books in the meantime so now I have a reason to read reviews of all the titles I do not own – and go out and buy the ones I think I might like. A wonderful prospect!

Two of my absolute favourite titles are Strange Highways and The Bad Place and The Forest of Lost Souls reminded me of those. Don’t ask me why though…
I was immediately immersed in the story and I think the high point for me was the conversation between Vida and one of the men who want her out of their way – only in a more horrifying way than even just to kill her. The conversation takes place during a home-cooked dinner but it sent shivers down my back.

It’s all about the greed of some stupid men and the willpower of a young woman; the story flows very cleverly between past and present. A story that doesn’t fit in one category but even if you never read any Dean Koontz novels, you should try this one.

Profile Image for Josh Bizeau.
95 reviews2 followers
November 17, 2024
So thoroughly and astonishingly inept, this novel's storytelling and characterization owe far more to Patterson and his legion of hack ghostwriters than to the legacy of its namesake author, whose work (the correlative prose styling of which easily leads me to saddle him alone with the entirety of my critique for this particular novel) I have found by turns impressive (From the Corner of His Eye), entertaining (Cold Fire), middling (The Face/Fear Nothing) and disappointing (Odd Thomas/By the Light of the Moon) over the years but never this properly appalling, signaling a full-throttle regression into inexperienced, sophomoric creative incapacity.

Truth be told, I find common cause with certain salient remarks brought up over the course of the narrative (and a particular point of disagreement where Koontz's curmudgeonly dismissal of modern, online cultural and socio-political content consumption is concerned), one involving the romantically misguided noble savage mythology, another regarding globalist-empowered multinational corporations overseeing genuine environmental degradation by way of so-called "green energy" implements which are little more than a means for the elite to further inflate their wealth and political influence whilst running roughshod over the planet and pruning away the undesirable, unwashed lower classes. The problem lies in Koontz's shocking inability to thread in these arguments subtly, favoring instead blunt-force rhetorical trauma.

More shocking are his characters: Caricatures, rather-- differentiated in cartoonish contrast between protagonist Vida, whose flawless, strong-willed persona is protected by a shallow kinship with nature (less 8 Ball magical realism, more Lucky Charms 8 artificial marshmallows) against a rotating annoyance of unidimensional, unconflicted, mustache-twirling Snidely Whiplashes (the gentle homicide of one in particular being grossly manipulative), grunting bridge trolls and an out-of-control CEO whose last name doubles for a description of his personality, so absurdly and comically villainous he makes Captain Planet's roster of baddies come off as well-rounded antagonists.

Vida's first love being expunged too early in the narrative for us to care (only hearing him "speak" in the penultimate pages where his words are used to fattened, ham-fisted affect), Koontz opts instead to bring a second love into the mix far too late for us to care and whose particular physical imperfection brings a suspension of disbelief which my mind--unfairly or otherwise-- could not cross (particularly given his character's repeated acceptance towards a life of solitude), magnified by a romancing period more truncated than that of Jack and Rose on the Titanic.

It should speak far more than my words can attest that it is fitting I should be unable to recall the names of the only two characters (one a corporate villain redeemed by the other, his small town "anime heroine") worth giving the faintest damn about in the story since apparently Koontz cared about them even less, leaving their story incomplete, hanging out to dry, thoroughly forgotten fewer than fifty pages from the final words of the book-- those only worth mentioning insofar as they commit the ultimate sin of name-dropping the book's title without even the barest decency of rephrasing or rewording.

The relatively brief appearances of "nature" in the form of a couple wolves (one physically extant, the other seemingly spirit though I doubt even Koontz cares to differentiate), who haunt for certain purpose, are akin to the gemstones our protagonist mines early on in the story: Exceedingly rare instances of color and luster amidst a veritable mountain of uninteresting, undeveloped loam.

This is a startlingly, incomprehensibly amateurish novel whose occasionally resplendent prose cannot save it from a much higher frequency of mundane writing, action scenes completely devoid of tension or stakes and abysmal plotting which culminates in a climax more rushed, clunky and messy than the high school linebacker's first time with the head cheerleader. And if that's too crass, I assure you the comparison is nowhere near so offensive as this work of fiction, type-written by a man whose long-standing fans are more than aware is capable of far better in every aspect outlined above.

In short-- do not recommend. For anyone. Ever.
Profile Image for Bronwyn.
1,460 reviews37 followers
December 25, 2024
I borrowed this book through KU and it came with the accompanying audiobook. Most who know me know that I am not a fan of audiobooks. However, this one was fabulous! Narrated by January LaVoy, the story comes to life. I loved all her unique and distinct voices even when there were 2 men or 2 women having a conversation.

I give the story itself 4 stars. Part of me feels that if I had just read the book, I would have felt a little lost at times. There was a lot of back and forth with the timeline in the beginning until the story coalesced into something more fluid. I enjoyed the mysticism of what was going on with Vida and I have some thoughts on who Lupo the wolf may or may not be. Who knows if I’m right, but it makes sense in my head. There were even quite a few times that made me laugh.

I thoroughly enjoyed this one!
Profile Image for CL.
791 reviews27 followers
October 13, 2024
As always Dean Koontz does not disappoint.

In this story good triumphs over evil but not before paying a price. A little folk lore and Native American history put together with modern day encroachments that will someday erase that part of history. All from the prospect of a way of life that has been almost forgotten.
Profile Image for Ritu Bhathal.
Author 6 books154 followers
August 21, 2024
My second Dean Koontz novel.
It is told from a few random POVs, but mainly from Vida, our MC; the story is part fantasy, part thriller, and a bit whoa if you know what I mean.
Vida lives alone, panning for gems, with a fantastic talent for what she does. She lives alone, having lost the uncle she lived with, and has recently lost her fiance, too.
Somehow, she becomes embroiled in finding out what happened to her fiance, pulling herself into danger and all manner of situations.
There's murder, horrific male characters who don't think much of women, wolves and a white lion...
As with the first, it took me a while to get into this, but the well-written, evocative language, rather than the storyline, gets my rating.
Profile Image for Aimee.
99 reviews19 followers
September 29, 2024
Is this a fever dream?

Oh man, I almost did not finish (DNF) this book as I found it painfully slow and awkward to start. It felt disjointed and frenetic in its storytelling but around 40% it picked up considerably. By 55% completion I was hooked. There are a lot of important social issues buried in here, as is usually the case with Dean Koontz works.

The Forest of Lost Souls delves into mythology, AI, capitalism, environmentalism, green energy, and your usual human paradigms like greed and crime. This story wasn’t what I was expecting at all, but I’m glad I stuck with it. I definitely feel like I’ll be thinking about its deeper meanings for days to come.

Was it my favorite? No. I’ll still call it a worthy read though.
Profile Image for Tasha.
189 reviews42 followers
November 2, 2024
5/5
This was my first time reading Dean Koontz, I will be reading a lot more of his books :) This one kind of reminded me of Where The Crawdad's Sing.
Profile Image for Cherie.
705 reviews1 follower
March 30, 2025
It’s been awhile since I’ve read a Dean Koontz book. The main character Vida lives in a remote area near a small western town. Her finance is murdered by a multi billionaire out to develop a wind farm in a nearby area.

The storyline had a lot of twists and turns as Vida outsmarts all the criminals sent to kill her. I enjoyed the suspense and supernatural parts of the book.
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