This nifty Dean Koontz novel is the story of Katie, an accomplished and attractive young artistic genius who has suffered terrible loss and adopted an insular existence in a fortress-like house on a small island in a remote lake. She seems just like a character from a Dean Koontz (or perhaps Leigh Nichols) book. There's a top-secret research facility run by a shadowy government agency on a nearby island, a situation which always leads to problems in Dean Koontz books, and on it lives Libby, a brilliant and precocious girl who seems just like a character from a Dean Koontz novel, who is the daughter of two of the scientists. In fact, Libby is a big fan of Dean Koontz: we learn on page 163 that One Door Away from Heaven is her favorite novel. Well, I'm trying to avoid any spoilers for a little while longer, but things go wrong and Katie and Libby team-up and the evil scientific danger that's released is far less of a threat and far less evil than the government black ops group in charge of the project. It's a predictable but fun read, and it's very well and elegantly written. For example, on page 31 instead of just flying away, "...the machines deliquesce into the blackness." His word choice is a little ornate but always poetic and evocative, and his prose is a joy to read. It's an enjoyable story, with some political and philosophical themes. I rarely read other reviews of books before I write my own comments, but this time I did. I found some odd things. Some people said they hated the book, it was the worst thing they'd read in years, and then rated it four stars. Some people said they loved it, that it was the best thing since sliced lemon cake, and then rated it as a two. Several reviews said it was too political because it was offensively left-wing libtard crazy, and just as many knocked it for being arch-conservative gun-crazy anti-everybody. Obviously, these folks didn't all read the same book, and neither did I. I've figured out what happened, so here's where I'm going to spoil it, so stop here, warning, warning, etc. There's a character named Michael J. who's a fox. (Got to have a canine, just like a Dean Koontz novel.) He's a remarkable fox who cozies up to Katie so she can take care of him, and then joins the team for real with Libby when things get worse and worse. After much thought, I've figured out why it all doesn't quite add up. Anyway, what's happened is that the evil alien entity infected him, and after he managed to get Katie and Libby to adopt him and he took control of their brains so they wouldn't notice how un-foxlike he acts, even though they're genius women on the lookout for strange behavior. He's a super-smart alien hybrid, so he probably took over the brains of the writer and editor of the novel, too, just so no one could catch on. The reason for the disparity in the reviews I noted earlier is that he's reaching out through the page to make you read what he wants you to think. I'm not really immune, he just wants me to sound crazy, so you won't take my theory seriously. And I should've posted this on April 1st, but that's too long to wait. Trust no one.