Read The Book of Counted Sorrows Online
Authors: Dean Koontz
Storms do not respond to heartfelt pleas.
All the words of men can't calm the seas.
Nature - always beneficent and cruel -
Won't change for a wise man or a fool.
Humanity shares Nature's imperfections,
Clearly visible to casual inspections.
Resisting betterment is the human trait.
The ideal of utopia is our tragic fate.
Ten Years Old, Reading In Bed
From a blanket, the boy built a palace
With a flashlight for a chandelier.
Down a rabbit hole, he followed Alice,
Where the cursing and shouting weren't clear.
He lived stories of courage and malice,
While the old man chased bourbon with beer.
Riding with horsemen north out of Dallas:
Thunderous hoofbeats would not let him hear
The plotless rage and the whiskey diction
And the chaos always conquered in fiction.
Fallen Yet Not Lacking In Virtue
Every eye sees its own special vision.
Every ear hears a most different song.
In each man's troubled heart, an incision
Would reveal a unique, shameful wrong.
Stranger fiends hide here in human guise
Than reside in the valleys of Hell.
Yet goodness, kindness, and love arise
In the heart of the poor beast as well.
February, 7969
She died wondering
If she were loved
She died with her hands
Ungloved
By the hands of a sister
Or her son
Neither one
Neither one
We were on the highway
In the night
Speeding to Pittsburgh
Stars not right
We arrived in the crisis
She couldn't wait
We reached her bedside
Too late
My father entered
Whiskey on his breath
More than my lost mother
He smelled of death
As useless as usual
Self-involved
Into tearless grief
His face dissolved
Had I not stopped
To eat a slice of toast
I might have gained
Two minutes at the most
Had I not changed my socks
And then my shoes
Before responding
To that urgent news
Had I driven
Even more recklessly
Mother might yet have been alive
For me
Still only aching flesh
And weary bone
But spared the burden of dying alone
We Are All So Modern Here
Peaches, surfers, California girls.
Wind scented with fabulous dreams
Bougainvillea, groves of oranges.
Stars are born, everything gleams.
A weather change. Shadows fall.
New scent upon the wind: decay.
Cocaine, Uzis, drive-by shootings.
Death is a banker. Everyone pays.
All Those Snappy Epigrams On The Theme Of Night
The whisper of the dusk
Is night shedding its husk.
Numberless paths of night
Wind away from twilight.
To know the darkness is to love the light,
To welcome dawn and fear the coming night.
Night has patterns that can be read
Less by the living than by the dead.
Something moves within the night
That is not good and is not right.
When I'm in the night,
I feel the night in me.
The night speaks with a human voice.
To commune with it remains our choice.
Brother night, sister moon.
Together sing a tuneless tune.
Anthem
To see what we have never seen,
To be what we have never been,
To shed the chrysalis and fly,
Depart the earth, kiss the sky,
To be reborn, be someone new:
Is this a dream or is it true?
Can our future be cleanly shorn
From a life to which we're born?
Is each of us a creature free -
Or trapped at birth by destiny?
Pity those who believe the latter.
Without freedom, nothing matters.
A Thought While Reading Rex Stout
Holy men tell us life is a mystery.
They embrace that concept happily.
But some mysteries bite and bark
And come to get you in the dark.
Cry Doom
Is that the end of the world a-coming?
Is that the devil they hear humming?
Are those doomsday bells a-ringing?
Is that the devil they hear singing?
Or are their dark fears exaggerated?
Are these doom-criers addlepated?
Those who fear the coming of all Hells
Are those who should be feared themselves.
Dragon Tears
Far away in China,
The people sometimes say,
Life is often bitter
And all too seldom gay.
Bitter as dragon tears,
Great cascades of sorrow
Flood down all the years,
Drowning our tomorrows.
Far away in China,
The people also say,
Life is sometimes joyous
If all too often gray.
Although life is seasoned
With bitter dragon tears,
Seasoning is but one spice
Within our brew of years.
Bad times are merely rice;
Tears are one more flavor
That gives us sustenance,
Something we can savor.
Cold Questions
Is there some meaning to this life?
What purpose lies behind the strife?
Whence do we come, where are we bound?
These cold questions echo and resound
Trough each day, each lonely night.
We long to find the splendid light
That will cast a revelatory beam
Upon the meaning of the human dream.
Mary Shelley, No One Listens
Humanity yearns
Desperately
To equal God's creativity
In some creations
How we shine
Music dance storytelling
Wine
Then thunderstorms of madness
Rain upon us
A flooding sadness
Sweeps us into anguish
Grief
Into despair
Without relief
We're drawn to high castles
Where old hunchbacked vassals
Glare wall-eyed
As lightning
Flares
Without brightening
Laboratories in high towers
Keen scientists
With sharp powers
Create new life
In dark hours
In the belfries of high towers
A Job May Not Be Enough
Life without meaning
Cannot he borne.
We find a mission
To which we're sworn
Or answer the call
Of Death's bleak horn.
Without a gleaning
Of purpose in life,
We have no vision,
We live in strife
Or let blood fall
On a suicide knife.
The Root Of All Mystery
Death is no fearsome mystery.
He is well known to thee and me.
He hath no secrets he can keep
To trouble any good man's sleep.
Turn not thy face from Death away.
Care not he takes thy breath away.
Fear him not, he's not thy master,
Rushing at thee faster, faster.
Not thy master but servant to
The Maker of thee, what Who
Created Death, created thee,
And is the only Mystery.
Haiku
Whiskers of the cat,
webbed toes on my swimming dog:
God is in details.
Sinuous shadow,
she moved like hot tears,
clear and bitter.
Tear-damp flush of face,
white cotton so sweetly curved,
bare knees together.
Moonlight on water,
eyes brimming ponds of spring rain:
dark fish in the mind.
Rare albino bats:
Calligraphy on the sky,
sealed by the full moon.
High looping white wings,
faint buzz of fleeing insects:
the killing is quiet.
The soft shush of surf,
conspiratorial fog
cover his return.
Dew on the gray steps.
Snail on the second wet tread,
crushed hard underfoot.
Hanging in the fog,
cascades of dead-still palm fronds
like cold dark fireworks.
Green eys growing gray.
Rosy skin borrows color
from the razor blade.
Black hair, black attire.
Blue eyes shine like Tiffany.
Her light, too, a lamp.
Wrapped up all in black.
Odd color to wrap a toy -
one not yet broken.
Girl's face shiny damp.
All the sorrow of the world
- yet such bright beauty.
From black sky, black wind.
Black, the windows of the house.
Does wind live within?
Busy blue-eyed girl.
Busy making Hobbit games.
Death waits in Mordor.
Cold stars, moon of ice,
and the silhouette of wings:
night bird seeking prey.
Moonglow on the sand.
Black shoes wear pale glowing scuffs.
Should I blame the moon?
Star, moon, and gunshots:
two deaths here where life began,
the sea and the surf.
Marshals and gunmen.
Shootouts in the western sun.
Vultures always eat.
Where God Goes on Vacation
(Dear Reader: This is the first of two poems deleted with the hope
of preventing you from going insane from too much knowledge and
to guard against the possibility of your head exploding. I myself
have not read this poem, either, though I would very much like to
know where God goes on vacation, because I would assume the
accommodations are magnificent.)
Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening with Exploding Heads:
A Tribute in Verse to Robert Frost
(Dear Reader: This is the second of two poems deleted with the hope of
preventing you from grinding up as sags of disgusting emulsified tissue on
the ceiling of your library, or [if you haven't got a library] on the
ceiling of your model train room, or [if you haven't got a model train room]
on the ceiling of your neighbor's model train room, or [if you haven't got a
neighbor] on the ceiling of the room where your Aunt Bertha keeps her
collections of stuffed alligators and bronzed jackboots.)
About the Author
When he was a senior in college, Dean Koontz won an Atlantic Monthly fiction competition and has been writing ever since. His books are published in 32 languages; worldwide sales are over 215 million copies.
Seven of his novels have risen to number one on The New York Times' hardcover best-seller list (Lightning, Midnight, Cold Fire, Hideaway, Dragon Tears, Intensity, and Sole Survivor), and eleven of his books have risen to number one in paperback.
The New York Times has called his writing "psychologically complex, masterly and satisfying." The New Orleans Times-Picayune said Koontz is, "at times lyrical without ever being naive or romantic. [He creates] a grotesque world, much like that of Flannery O'Conner or Walker Percy ... scary, worthwhile reading." Of Cold Fire, a worldwide #1 bestseller, the United Press International said, "an extraordinary piece of fiction. It will be a classic."
Dean Koontz was born and raised in Pennsylvania. He graduated from Shippensburg State College (now Shippensburg University), and his first job after graduation was in the Appalachian Poverty Program, where he was expected to counsel and tutor underprivileged children on a one-to-one basis. His first day at work, he discovered that the previous occupant of his position had been beaten up by the very kids he'd been trying to help and had landed in the hospital for several weeks. The following year was filled with challenge but also tension, and Koontz was more highly motivated than ever to build a career as a writer.
He wrote nights and weekends, which he continued to do after leaving the poverty program and going to work as an English teacher in a suburban school district outside of Harrisburg. After he had been a year and a half in that position, his wife, Gerda, made him an offer he couldn't refuse: I'll support you for five years," she said, "and if you can't make it as a writer in that time, you'll never make it." By the end of those five years, Gerda had quither job to run the business end of her husband's writing career.
Dean and Gerda live in Newport Beach, California.