5/22/2023 0 Comments The prodigal son dean koontz![]() ![]() (I’m beginning to think that popular writers’ names have a nearly homeopathic power – no matter how much they’re diluted, the audience will keep clamoring for more.) (There was also a TV deal at the time, though, sadly, it eventually fell through.) And now long-time comics writer Chuck Dixon has adapted that novel, which was at least half-written by Anderson in the first place, into a comics series…which, of course, still has “Dean Koontz” as the largest thing on the cover. Anderson to co-write a novel called ]], and then a couple of sequels. ![]() Or, if you’re Dean Koontz, you could do both. At that point, assuming that scruples aren’t a problem – and how on earth did he become a best-selling writer and keep his scruples, anyway? – the options are two: let someone else write a book under your name, or license something you’ve already written to another medium, and let Joe Hired-Hand do the heavy lifting in that format. OK, maybe that realization comes to all of us – but the best-selling writer can actually do something about it. There comes a time in every best-selling writer’s life when he realizes that he’d like to make money even faster than he can write books. ![]() Dean Koontz’s Frankenstein: Prodigal Son, Volume OneĪdaptation by Chuck Dixon Illustrated by Brett Booth ![]()
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