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Hilarious Catastrophe, with Dean Koontz (Author, Publishing, Writing, Business)
Episode 41331st January 2023 • The Action Catalyst • Southwestern Family of Podcasts
00:00:00 00:28:30

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Dean Koontz, best-selling author with over 100 novels published and more than 500 million copies sold, talks about the way his alcoholic father shaped his childhood as well as his writing, has a personal realization about his first major character, shares the real life experience that led to creating the character of Odd Thomas, addresses how to deal with naysayers, gives his best advice that translates from the literary world to the business world, tells a cautionary career tale about zombie novels, and reveals more than a few spoilers from his latest book.

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Transcripts

Adam Outland:

Welcome Action Catalyst listeners.

Adam Outland:

Today we have an extraordinary guest with Dean Koontz.

Adam Outland:

He is a bestselling author, having published over 105 novels.

Adam Outland:

Over 500 million copies have now been sold.

Adam Outland:

He has 14 hard covers and 16 paperbacks reaching the number one position and has had a number of those books, uh, trans.

Adam Outland:

To movies as well, starring the likes of Jeff Goldblum, Alicia Silverstone, and Ben Affleck.

Adam Outland:

So we're really pleased to have, uh, Dean Koontz on today.

Adam Outland:

Great to meet you as well.

Adam Outland:

Well, we're really excited when I, I, I heard you were coming on in part because in my early days I started with an eagerness to author and write books, and so always any opportunity to meet someone who has written, uh, even close to as many books as you have, there's, there's always a litany of questions to.

Adam Outland:

But before we dive into to some thoughts on writing, I wanted to dig in a little bit more to, to your story and how it started.

Adam Outland:

Um, Shippensburg, Pennsylvania, where geographically is Shippensburg,

Dean Koontz:

it's sort of, I guess you would say it's South Central.

Dean Koontz:

It's a small town in Amish country, not terribly far from Lancaster.

Dean Koontz:

And it was a, uh, state college, uh, mainly it.

Dean Koontz:

There to turn out teachers for high school, elementary school.

Dean Koontz:

Uh, and I went there to be a teacher, uh, which, uh, I had no idea what I was going to be.

Dean Koontz:

I was a kid who came from such a poor family.

Dean Koontz:

I never imagined I would go to college, and yet there I was.

Adam Outland:

If you don't mind, I'd love like a, a flashback even further.

Adam Outland:

I mean, did you just grow up thinking, Hey, I'm gonna be an author.

Adam Outland:

I just love writing.

Dean Koontz:

In fact, there were no books in our house because they were considered a waste of time.

Dean Koontz:

My dad was a violent alcoholic and, uh, we lived in, uh, what was basically a two-story dark paper roof shack.

Dean Koontz:

We never knew if we'd be there next week or we'd still have a roof over our heads.

Dean Koontz:

So I never thought too much about what I would do or what I would.

Dean Koontz:

It seems strange.

Dean Koontz:

I was a relatively happy kid, especially when my father wasn't around and I could find ways to, uh, to entertain myself.

Dean Koontz:

And by the time I was able to read when I was about three or four, my mother got r she was most of her life.

Dean Koontz:

So I was sent to a friend of my mother's, and this funeral was much older and her children had graduated high school and I moved in with her for six months.

Dean Koontz:

And her house was the opposite of ours.

Dean Koontz:

She and her husband drink.

Dean Koontz:

There was a grandfather clock ticking in the hallway and in the cas on all the art chairs, a very, very orderly place.

Dean Koontz:

And every night she put me to bed with an ice cream soda and read a story to me.

Dean Koontz:

It took me twice in my thirties when it suddenly dawned.

Dean Koontz:

That was where I began to identify storytelling with peace, quiet, and orderliness.

Dean Koontz:

Hmm.

Dean Koontz:

I'm pretty sure that woman put me on the path.

Dean Koontz:

So when I was eight years old, I was actually writing stories, uh, stapling the edge, drawing the cover, and selling to relatives Fred Nickel.

Dean Koontz:

So I was author, agent, publish.

Dean Koontz:

Bookseller all in one.

Dean Koontz:

But I never saw myself as a writer until I was a senior at college and a teacher there had submitted a story I wrote for class to an Atlantic monthly competition for college writing, and it won.

Dean Koontz:

Wow.

Dean Koontz:

And it was in the history hundred and so years.

Dean Koontz:

History of this contest in this college.

Dean Koontz:

No one in this college had ever replaced in this contest.

Dean Koontz:

So overnight I went from being a student who just got by to somebody who started to.

Dean Koontz:

Maybe there's this other thing I can do.

Dean Koontz:

And when I saw that I no longer had to work or even tried or an agree, the reputation that followed having won this prize got me straight A and I said, Hey, this is good stuff,

Dean Koontz:

And that I think is where I decided I gotta try.

Dean Koontz:

This is the way I turned around and was bold enough to send that story off to magazine called Readers and Writers, which isn't with us anymore.

Dean Koontz:

But they paid me $50 for the story.

Dean Koontz:

Uh, and I thought, ah, you know, that awakened me further to the idea you might be an able parent living with this.

Dean Koontz:

That's incredible.

Adam Outland:

Was that also a moment of realization of how to take.

Adam Outland:

Inferences from the real world and pack them into a fictional story.

Adam Outland:

I mean, I, I, I, this is a personal feeling that I have, that a lot of great writers have this ability to synthesize personal experience and inject it into fiction.

Adam Outland:

Was that your methodology at, at that early stage of writing?

Adam Outland:

Uh,

Dean Koontz:

I, I would say I was too young and foolish to think that deeply in those days.

Dean Koontz:

, uh, although now that you've raised that, It is interesting to think that the story that won the prize and sold for $50 was a little piece called The Kittens and the essence of that story.

Dean Koontz:

Is the lead character is this little girl.

Dean Koontz:

Uh, and the essence of that story is she has a father who lies to her and he tells her what turns out for her to be a catastrophic lie, and she acts upon it and does something that destroys the whole family.

Dean Koontz:

And when I think about that, my father, Was her father in that, so I was drawing at that time.

Dean Koontz:

Now I've never actually stopped.

Dean Koontz:

Think about that.

Dean Koontz:

Then as when I started selling, I, I started selling science fiction novels and short stories because that was the kind of thing as a kid I most read and it took me, uh, took me.

Dean Koontz:

Number of years and almost 20 novels before I decided I'm never gonna be top, uh, top class as a science fiction writer.

Dean Koontz:

I just don't have that extra thing about foreseeing the future where foreseeing certain trends that is part of that.

Dean Koontz:

And I didn't wanna be there if I couldn't be doing better work than I was.

Dean Koontz:

And that's when I started moving off.

Dean Koontz:

I wrote a comic novel.

Dean Koontz:

I wrote suspense novels.

Dean Koontz:

Hmm.

Adam Outland:

I actually read your, your books as a, as a young person.

Adam Outland:

And I was reflecting ahead of this interview on certain stories that really gravitated to me personally.

Adam Outland:

Even in fiction.

Adam Outland:

I felt what rooted me was the character study.

Adam Outland:

Like if, if you really nailed.

Adam Outland:

A character that was believable and a fictional story

Dean Koontz:

for you quite a few years.

Dean Koontz:

Now, I've said plot is that.

Dean Koontz:

Fine.

Dean Koontz:

Uh, the plot of the story can be compelling.

Dean Koontz:

You can be thrown through the novel cuz you're so excited about what might happen next.

Dean Koontz:

But in the end, fiction is about character and if the characters don't really grip you, then story will not stay with you for 10 years or 20 years as one will that the character stays with you.

Dean Koontz:

I, I had a friend in college who was an absolute stone fan of John D.

Dean Koontz:

McDonald, the suspense novelist, and I was an English maker, and this friend of mine was a history major, so my attitude, of course was I knew better than he did.

Dean Koontz:

And then when I was outta college, I thought, well, let me see what Harry was talking about.

Dean Koontz:

And I picked up the John D.

Dean Koontz:

McDonald level and he's a master of character.

Dean Koontz:

And one thing about McDonald that fascinated me, I, he was so good at story too, that.

Dean Koontz:

You would get so caught up in the story.

Dean Koontz:

And then McDonald, he would introduce the characters and sometimes he would just stop and tell you that character's passed and it would go on for six, seven pages.

Dean Koontz:

And you're never supposed to do something like that.

Dean Koontz:

You're supposed to find other ways to do it.

Dean Koontz:

And the first time I encountered this, I got a pager.

Dean Koontz:

So I went, wait a minute.

Dean Koontz:

We've stopped the whole story here.

Dean Koontz:

What's he doing?

Dean Koontz:

And I paged forward to see when does this stop and get back to the story.

Dean Koontz:

And I saw how far it was and I, well, I guess I gotta read this.

Dean Koontz:

And by the time I read those seven pages and the story picked up again, I said, no, wait a minute.

Dean Koontz:

I wanna know more about this character's background.

Dean Koontz:

And that was an illuminating moment and that that was the way to write character.

Adam Outland:

I love that.

Adam Outland:

And, and I.

Adam Outland:

If we just kind of go back to timeline.

Adam Outland:

When you graduated Shippensburg, you, you didn't go right into authoring, uh, prolifically.

Adam Outland:

You actually had kind of an interim job that you did for a while.

Adam Outland:

If you don't mind, maybe share a little bit on that, that experience.

Dean Koontz:

I had two teaching positions.

Dean Koontz:

Uh, the first one was there was a school in the Appalachian poverty zone.

Dean Koontz:

I was looking for somebody in a specialty position who would be given students from, by other teachers who would pick students in their class.

Dean Koontz:

Who came from a very poverty stricken families, but had high aptitude and could benefit from very small classes where you had like six students in in that class and you would tutor them in English and I'd have a few of those classes a day, but never many people in it.

Dean Koontz:

The teachers in these other.

Dean Koontz:

Did not live by the rules of this federal program.

Dean Koontz:

They didn't give me the kids in their class at the highest aptitude they gave, gave me the kids in their class who were the most troubled kids who had police records with a violence in their records, and it was a rough rest of that year.

Dean Koontz:

It was fascinating.

Dean Koontz:

But I did discover that even in these kids who were being thrown, By the system when they found out somebody actually cared about them and was going to say, you're not gonna screw around in this class, you're gonna get something out of it.

Dean Koontz:

And so I didn't get killed that year, but I did find out that the teacher before me had been run off the road on his way home from school by his own students and they had beaten him up and put him in the hospital while they remained for a month.

Dean Koontz:

And that year was a very instructive.

Dean Koontz:

I wouldn't have wanted to do a second year, but it wasn't a waste video.

Dean Koontz:

It taught me quite a lot.

Adam Outland:

So it just reflecting on some of the hard teaching moments of teaching and dealing with some of those rough and tumble situations and some of the, the characters in the individuals that you met doing that, I mean, do you ever go back into some of your past relationships or people to draw as reference for plots or, or

Dean Koontz:

character?

Dean Koontz:

Yeah, everything.

Dean Koontz:

You go through in life ends up in the current book or the next one.

Dean Koontz:

Wow.

Dean Koontz:

It's conversations we hear in a restaurant that I kind of fold into the story because I think they're amusing.

Dean Koontz:

You end up using an awful lot of what you see here and go through in life.

Dean Koontz:

Whether you're looking at life as a resource for what you're gonna write or not, your subconscious is, and the strangest things ends up being material in a.

Dean Koontz:

It's

Adam Outland:

so interesting hearing you say that.

Adam Outland:

I remember listening to an interview with a comedian who, because of his career in comedy, it colors how you take in information in the real world.

Adam Outland:

You know, uh, and this is maybe a little screwed up, but a comedian has this immediate filter where I, I can't remember who's, Said this, but uh, tragedy plus time equals comedy and they can compress that time to minutes.

Adam Outland:

Where most of us it takes years.

Adam Outland:

And what I hear you say is, is kind of the author's equivalent where, and I'm curious, you know, if, if I'm saying that correctly, when did that really begin for you, where you would take events or you'd listen and hear something and make a mental note or bookmark something to come back and revisit?

Dean Koontz:

You know, I don't actually make a mental note or a bookmark or write it down.

Dean Koontz:

I'm often asked if a character is particularly popular with readers.

Dean Koontz:

Is that based on somebody who knew?

Dean Koontz:

And it never is.

Dean Koontz:

But parts of that character are definitely, are.

Dean Koontz:

There's elements of the character.

Dean Koontz:

Sometimes it's elements of different people, and then things you.

Dean Koontz:

I would say that the character of odd Thomas that I, uh, wrote eight books about that.

Dean Koontz:

If I look at odd Thomas, there's a lot that odd learned about bias that I learned about.

Dean Koontz:

Life through that year when I was teaching those kids who had criminal records.

Dean Koontz:

And odd is this relaxed sort of guy who deals with a lot of terrible things in it, but he, he's not the kind of male lead that carries a gun.

Dean Koontz:

He sees the humor in life and those books have a lot, and I've always seen the humor in life.

Dean Koontz:

But when I was in that situation, in that school district, It became a survival instinct.

Dean Koontz:

And when I had to write about, uh, Thomas, how did you cope with these stressful moments of that?

Dean Koontz:

And it was with finding humor in it.

Dean Koontz:

There, there's another quote about comedy that catastrophe.

Dean Koontz:

After enough years go by, catastrophe can be hilarious.

Dean Koontz:

And uh, there's something true in that too.

Adam Outland:

Yeah.

Adam Outland:

Talk to me about the emotional rollercoaster of your life since so many of these things are reflected, not, not throwing that on you, but more of a question of so many of our listeners obviously are right now going through tough times, and so as a way to relate to that, what were some of your tougher moments

Dean Koontz:

young writers?

Dean Koontz:

When they ask me for advice, they always sort of say, well, I've got a lot of foolishness, I can tell you.

Dean Koontz:

But, and the, the real advice, the good advice I know from experience, almost nobody ever takes because, uh, they think that my career was this smooth, upward glide path.

Dean Koontz:

And it was anything but I was writing 13 or 15 years before I ever had bestseller.

Dean Koontz:

And then even after I had bestsellers, I.

Dean Koontz:

So many naysayers in the publishing business telling me I couldn't do what I was doing.

Dean Koontz:

It's an astonishing thing to look back on, and it's one of the most valuable things I can say is you're gonna hit so many people telling you you're doing it the wrong way.

Dean Koontz:

It's never gonna happen for you.

Dean Koontz:

The world is full of people who say it's possible.

Dean Koontz:

The first book I had that was a hard cover at bestseller, it was a book called Stranger.

Dean Koontz:

The publisher had told me it was a very large book.

Dean Koontz:

Publisher told me she would support it, but I had to cut 40 some percent of it and I couldn't just, if I cut.

Dean Koontz:

That much of the book, it would've made no sense, but it nevertheless creped onto the bottom of the best artist.

Dean Koontz:

And then the next book was a book called Watchers, and it did even better.

Dean Koontz:

But the book after that was a book called like, and the publisher just just hated the book and told me, I can't publish this.

Dean Koontz:

You're finally creeping onto the best seller list.

Dean Koontz:

You're having increasing success.

Dean Koontz:

This book will destroy your.

Dean Koontz:

and I said, why?

Dean Koontz:

And she said, your vocabulary is too large.

Dean Koontz:

You have to keep a vocabulary.

Dean Koontz:

You have five to 600 words to be on the bestseller list.

Dean Koontz:

And then it was also your, your storylines are too complex.

Dean Koontz:

You have to make them simpler because readers don't go for complex things.

Dean Koontz:

Your unique character is.

Dean Koontz:

A child for the first 30% of the book growing up, and you can't do that.

Dean Koontz:

You can't have the feature character for any length of Plan B a child.

Dean Koontz:

And I thought, what about Oliver Twist?

Dean Koontz:

What about to kill a mopping bird?

Dean Koontz:

We argued for six months.

Dean Koontz:

She published the book.

Dean Koontz:

It ended up getting to number three in the New York Times, and my next book was my first number one.

Dean Koontz:

Then when midnight hit number one, this publisher called me up and said, this will never happen to go because you don't write.

Dean Koontz:

Find books that can be number one

Dean Koontz:

Uh, And we did formal books together.

Dean Koontz:

Each one was number one, and every single time I was told, this will never happen again until you finally say, okay, I've gotta go somewhere where they think this could happen.

Dean Koontz:

And it's the hardest thing to know when the naysayer is wrong.

Dean Koontz:

And taking the good advice, but not the bad advice.

Dean Koontz:

It, it's the, was the hardest thing my, in my career, and it helped me back for many years because I, I would just say, well, this person is at the top of the business.

Dean Koontz:

They must know what they're talking about.

Dean Koontz:

And it took me a while to realize, nope, not always.

Adam Outland:

That's right.

Adam Outland:

Is there anything that you've developed in terms of a, maybe a series of questions or a way to pause and, and reflect on someone's opinion before deciding whether or not to receive it?

Dean Koontz:

It took me a long time.

Dean Koontz:

I mean a few decades to get to the point.

Dean Koontz:

Where I would be sure of myself that I was right.

Dean Koontz:

I remember when I delivered Doc Thomas, it was a totally mother publisher, but when I delivered Doc Thomas, he hated it so much.

Dean Koontz:

He told the editor why he disliked it.

Dean Koontz:

I, I began to see certain things about his personality that it helped me understand that was within.

Dean Koontz:

Kind of a hesitancy to admit that you could be wrong, and I could see that in certain other things that was happening in that company.

Dean Koontz:

It was a refusal to acknowledge that a wrong decision had been made.

Dean Koontz:

So I came to see you then.

Dean Koontz:

That whenever you work with that person, you couldn't say, uh, you're wrong about that.

Dean Koontz:

You had to take a different tack and say, well, here's why I think, you know, the public will like this and take other ways to get your way.

Dean Koontz:

And I began to see it after that many cases that it always comes outta.

Dean Koontz:

What people may have been through in their own life and why they deeply desire to have their way.

Dean Koontz:

Different people have different reasons for why they don't have way, and it can be very hard to figure out the psychology of it, and therefore you have to be more diplomatic.

Adam Outland:

It's so interesting.

Adam Outland:

So many of our listeners are business owners and, and in the business world and, and Dina, everything you're saying does apply.

Adam Outland:

It's, it, it translates so amazingly from, from authoring.

Adam Outland:

Persuasion is important.

Adam Outland:

Uh, being able to be willing to admit per personally when you're wrong and leave opening for that, but also trusting your gut at times.

Adam Outland:

And it's, it's true.

Adam Outland:

It's, I mean, it's a universal thing.

Adam Outland:

You know, just a, a couple of spitball questions that I, I wanted to throw out, you know, one, I I was just kind of curious if, if there's a book that you've read recently, uh, not your own that you've really enjoyed, or, uh, if you're really continuing to read a lot at the stage of your life, if there's anything that's been appealing to you recently.

Dean Koontz:

I'd say the last several years I've had to so much research material for the fiction I'm writing that I've read, read Less for Pleasure than I used to, but, , and it's also a fact that when my wife and I were first married, we didn't have a television for 10 years.

Dean Koontz:

It was about six of those years we couldn't afford it then we just didn't really want one.

Dean Koontz:

Every night our entertainment was reading, and for number of years we read about 200 books a year each.

Dean Koontz:

That was great for learning to write novels because I read in every time that fiction, every genre.

Dean Koontz:

. Adam Outland: Wow.

Dean Koontz:

And then you have a book, the House at the End of the World.

Dean Koontz:

If you don't mind, maybe, uh, given a clue on this, what you said, you've been embroiled and researched for

Dean Koontz:

books.

Dean Koontz:

You, you get to a point in this book where I had to do quite a lot of science research Oh, wow.

Dean Koontz:

But all kind of other things because, uh, this is a story about a woman who lives alone on a remote island at the end of the thousand Island.

Dean Koontz:

She is a survivor of a catastrophic tragedy, and it takes a long time for you to come to an understanding of, of why she has moved to this remote island.

Dean Koontz:

It's a, it's a novel that really I think everybody's gonna relate to very well because it's a novel about how in our time and for quite a while, a great many people in the ruling class are failing.

Dean Koontz:

And, uh, they're failing us in many ways and many of the highest professions, certainly in politics and governance.

Dean Koontz:

And she is, uh, a victim of an epic failure and she pretty much gives up on life except for our, she's a painter and she moves to this remote island, and once she gets to this island, she.

Dean Koontz:

That's, there's an island after it.

Dean Koontz:

And what she was told is there is an environmental protection agency research station on it.

Dean Koontz:

Well, that turns out to be a lie.

Dean Koontz:

There is another research station on that island, but it's nothing as benign as the Environmental Protection Agency.

Dean Koontz:

And if she thinks she can, What's happening to this society she's in by getting to a remote island that turns out lovely.

Dean Koontz:

True.

Dean Koontz:

But it's also a very upbeat novel.

Dean Koontz:

Uh, it's scary as hell, I'll say that, but, uh, in the end it's a very positive, uh, novel.

Dean Koontz:

Very

Adam Outland:

compelling.

Adam Outland:

Look forward to, to picking it up myself.

Adam Outland:

If you'd leave our listeners with one last thing, Dean.

Adam Outland:

It would be the, the question would be, knowing everything that you know now, having written all the books you've written, if you had the chance to, to sit back down with a young 21 year old Dean Koontz, what advice, knowing what you know today, would you give that, that 21 year old dean?

Dean Koontz:

Well, so many things, but I, I have seen too often by young writers, Will scope the market, they'll put up the periscope and look around and see what's selling, and they'll go write that.

Dean Koontz:

Don't zombie novels.

Dean Koontz:

Were the biggest thing in the world for seven, eight years, but zombie novels are not gonna be the thing that gives you a 40, 50 year career.

Dean Koontz:

The only thing that will do that, but in fact what'll happen is you'll become known as a zomi book writer.

Dean Koontz:

What you've gotta do is.

Dean Koontz:

What did I really love to write?

Dean Koontz:

Or what do I really love to paint?

Dean Koontz:

It's what you love, so it sort of applies to everything and then how you approach it.

Dean Koontz:

, I don't think, how do you do this and succeed based on how it's always been done and succeeded before?

Dean Koontz:

Because it's the love of doing what you're doing that will make it a success.

Dean Koontz:

The fact you love it becomes that evident in the work itself, and that makes it work that other people enjoy.

Dean Koontz:

And that's, I don't think matters to whatever.

Dean Koontz:

It's running a re.

Dean Koontz:

Is a perfect example.

Dean Koontz:

If you absolutely love the food business, the food industry and the service industry, it's gonna come through in the quality of that restaurant.

Dean Koontz:

And if you don't, it's also gonna come through.

Dean Koontz:

Do what you love.

Dean Koontz:

That's only one life.

Dean Koontz:

And then don't get caught up in extraneous things.

Dean Koontz:

Don't get caught up in politics, in ideology.

Dean Koontz:

It doesn't matter which side.

Dean Koontz:

Just get caught up in human journey, which is about many other things than the stuff you see on the news and, and I think about what's important to their people in any business.

Dean Koontz:

And it won't be those things.

Dean Koontz:

It'll be those things in their daily lives that they care.

Adam Outland:

Brilliant advice and I know a lot of people will appreciate it, so I really appreciate you making the time for this conversation.

Adam Outland:

Thanks again, Dean for, for carving out time for us.

Dean Koontz:

Thanks for having me.

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