The Taking

Unabridged
Author: Dean Koontz
Narrator: Ari Meyers
Genres: Fiction, Mystery, Thriller
Publisher: Random House (Audio)
Date: May 2004
Length: 13 hours
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD

Overview

Dean Koontz delivers a novel of surpassing suspense and visceral terror, a small-town slice-of-doomsday thriller that will take the summer by storm.

On the morning that will mark the end of the world they have known, Molly and Niel Sloan awaken to the drumbeat of rain on their roof. It has haunted their dreams through the night, and now they find a luminous silvery downpour drenching their small California mountain town. As the rain continues to fall, as hours pass and the young couple hear news of extreme weather phenomena across the globe, an obscuring fog turns once familiar streets into a ghostly labyrinth. By evening, the town has lost all modes of communication, and the Sloan’s have gathered with some of their neighbours., sensing a threat they cannot identify or even imagine.

In the night, strange noises arise and mysterious lights are seen drifting among the trees. The rain diminishes with the dawn but a moody gray-purple twilight prevails. Within the misty gloom, the small band will encounter something that reveals in a terrifying instant what is happening to the world-something that is hunting them with ruthless efficiency.

Epic in scope, searingly intimate and immediate in its perspective, Dean Koontz’s THE TAKING is an adventure story like no other, a relentless rollercoaster ride that brings apocalypse to Main Street and showcases the talents of the modern master of suspense at his powers.

Reviews (47)

The Taking

Written by Anonymous on March 6th, 2010

  • Book Rating: 4/5

I enjoyed this book alot. Koontz has a way of using words and describing things that is almost poetic. Who is to say how the end of the world will look when it is hear.

Ok...

Written by Anonymous on January 26th, 2009

  • Book Rating: 3/5

I remember liking this book better when I read it. I didn't think the reader did much for the book as her "guy" voice was distractingly bad. I'd suggest trying to read this book if you are a Koontz fan... but if you must listen, it will still put a scare in you.

The Taking

Written by Barbara from New York, NY on January 18th, 2009

  • Book Rating: 5/5

The Taking was a wonderful book. I would reccomend this to all readers. Wonderful just wonderful.

just ok

Written by jonathan on November 14th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 3/5

this particular koontz book was very different. I liked the idea of the story but the narrator wasn't very good and the story seemed to drift a lot. there were times i had to back up and re-listen to parts of the story. In the end it all made sense. but getting thru the middle of the book was tough.

Not this one

Written by Anonymous on September 15th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 1/5

I just could not get into this book. I tried for two discs, but in the end, sent it back. I would tell you "not this one."

The Taking

Written by Anonymous from Yorba Linda, CA on June 27th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 1/5

I have come to enjoy Dean Koontz and his writing, but this book was just plain ridiculous. I don't agree with the other reviewers who disliked the reader, I think she was fine, it was just the whole plot line that was horrible in my view. I do not recommend this book. If you are a Koontz fan, beware, this title is not like his others, it is just plain bad.

The Taking

Written by R More on June 6th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 3/5

Wow... the reviews of this book were all over the place but I took a chance and really enjoyed it. Koontz did go a wee bit overboard on the wordage though. The reader has been bashed on as well but I found her right on target for the "tone" of the book. I normally shy from female readers... I know not why... I just do, but I found her enjoyable. Almost everyone I have ever met, and every culture I have ever studied seems to have a little voice of someday doom. Nice work on blending sci-fi with a grain of religion to spell out our last days.

The Taking

Written by Robert Weidman on March 27th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 4/5

One of my favorite Dean Koontz's stories. Unfortunately the reader's delivery distracts from the story. Her monotone delivery leaves you fretting over her reading instead of enjoying a well written book. My wife has the same opinion of the reader.

the Taking

Written by Kathy B on March 27th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 2/5

The first part of this book was suspenseful and interesting, and you could almost feel the ominous presence of 'the taking' of the earth. What could have been a very interesting twist on a plot similar to War of the Worlds and Invasion of the Body Snatchers evaporated into an almost ridiculous series of events. Although I am a great lover of words, some words were used in an almost ridiculous fashion and I came very close to giving up on this book toward the end.

The Taking

Written by Toni Osbon on November 20th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 1/5

I kept waiting for something exciting to happen or at least for the narrator to spark it up but it never did. I determined it was a horror story but so far fetched and not really plausible. Alien creatures in the form of mushrooms..ewww! I would not recommend to anyone. His analoglies were so out there and I felt he was throwing theories around to make himself (the author), seem smart. I am no rocket scientest but the end of the world could've been written with a little more imagination. The ending was so cliche including the sunset. The sequel could be the baby's she bears looks like the mushroom creatures.

Author Details

Author Details

Koontz, Dean

Dean Koontz grew up in desperate poverty under the tyranny of a violent alcoholic father (Koontz's father served time in prison for trying to murder him). Despite his traumatic childhood, Koontz put himself through Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania (then known as Shippensburg State College), and in 1967 went to work as an English teacher at Mechanicsburg High School. In his spare time he wrote his first novel, Star Quest, which was published in 1968. From there he went on to write over a dozen more science fiction novels.

In the 1970s, Koontz began publishing mainstream suspense and horror fiction, under his own name as well as under several pseudonyms; Koontz has stated he used pen names after several editors convinced him that authors who switched genre fell victim to "negative crossover": alienating established fans, while simultaneously not picking up any new fans. Known pseudonyms include Deanna Dwyer, K. R. Dwyer, Aaron Wolfe, David Axton, Brian Coffey, John Hill, Leigh Nichols, Owen West, and Richard Paige. Currently some of those novels are sold under Koontz's real name.

Koontz's breakthrough novel was Whispers (1980). Several of his books have reached #1 on the New York Times bestseller list.

Koontz is renowned for his skill at writing suspenseful page-turners. His strengths also include memorable characters, original ideas, and ability to blend horror, fantasy and humour. Koontz has been criticized for his tendency to include too many similes and therefore to drag out descriptions, his frequent use of similar plotting structures, and a tendency to moralize heavily.

Koontz's protagonists,with the exception of Odd Thomas,arm theirselves with guns to do combat against the various monsters and madmen,and Koontz gets all the technical details right.There are no mistakes(functions and capabilities of different types of guns.)

Arguably, most of Koontz's work can still be classified as science fiction, as he tries to create plausible, consistent explanations for the unusual, fantastic events featured in most of his novels.

Koontz also has a very interesting way of adding his own little quirks to his novels, such as adding simple quotes from a book by the name of The Book of Counted Sorrows. Counted Sorrows was originally a hoax, like the nonexistent Keener's Manual Richard Condon cited for epigraphs he wrote himself. Eventually Koontz put together a poetry collection of that name, using all the epigraphs; it was printed as a limited edition in 2003 by Charnel House and as an eBook by Barnes & Noble. His more recent novels, starting with The Taking, have no verse by Koontz; rather, they have quotes by other authors (in particular, The Taking uses quotes from T. S. Eliot, whose works figure in the plot of the novel).

Koontz has long been a fan of Art Bell's radio program, Coast to Coast AM. He appeared as a guest after a fan reported to Bell that one of Koontz's novels featured a character describing a paranormal event as an "Art Bell moment."

Koontz currently resides in Newport Beach, a city in Southern California (as such, most of his novels are set in Southern California) with his wife Gerda and their dog Trixie Koontz, under whose name he published the book, Life is Good: Lessons in Joyful Living, in 2004. Trixie is also often referenced in his official newsletter "Useless News".

Dogs often figure heavily in Koontz's novels, as he is an avid dog lover. Watchers, Dark Rivers of the Heart, and One Door Away from Heaven are prime examples. However, lately he has seen fit to include cats as characters, most notably the smart cat Mungojerrie in the Christopher Snow novels.