
The Bad Weather Friend is one of Dean Koontz’s more bizarre additions to his bibliography, but it’s pretty entertaining and not without some creativity.
An amiable realtor named Benny Catspaw suddenly has his life come apart at the seams when he loses his job inexplicably. Even more troubling is when his fiancée ends their relationship. As Benny is trying to understand this onslaught of misfortune, he suddenly receives an unexpected message from a man claiming to be a previously unknown uncle. A crate is delivered which Benny later finds contains a giant of a man called Spike who says that he is a being who is assigned to people who are apparently too nice for this world. Benny also meets a waitress who is an aspiring private eye, and she is an enthusiastic ally. During the present-day adventure, Benny recalls his peculiar family history and his time at an unusual boarding school where he did have a couple of friends. Benny finds that he has been targeted by a powerful group, but he has a rather interesting being known as a craggle working on his behalf as well. Spike is sworn to keep Benny from the worst the world is able to throw at him and will employ some unusual and fantastic tactics to do just that.
Koontz remains an imaginative and witty author. This story is rather strange but pretty entertaining. Koontz is pretty skilled at the art of witty banter. The protagonists are likeable enough. Spike is a rather unique creation, but the story sort of loses some sense of suspense because he is pretty invulnerable.
The themes in this novel are little too familiar in Koontz’s works. Once again, it is someone with an ideal sense of morals and outlook on life. The villains that are revealed are a little too cartoonishly narcissistic to be really believable, but I suppose such people do exist. Koontz also is back into the realm of strange conspiracies and shadow organizations, which feels annoyingly repetitive.
Koontz does have a distinctive turn of phrase which keeps the story compelling. There are some pretty amusing passages throughout the novel.
Koontz does seem to be a literary one-trick pony sometimes, but this novel still is worth the time. I read a lot of Koontz in my younger years, and I don’t regret revisiting his prose this time in spite of mixed reactions to this particular novel.
The lifelong reading binge continues with C.J. Box’s Free Fire.