Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - Cold Fire

Cold Fire
Cold Fire
Author: Dean R. Koontz
Jim Ironheart, an ordinary schoolteacher, flies to Portland, Oregon, on an impulse, unable to explain why he's compelled to make the trip. There he risks his life to save a young boy from being killed by a drunk driver. — Reporter Holly Thorne witnesses Jim's heroism. His athletic grace and courage intrigue her. When he declines to be interviewed...  more »
ISBN: 102700
Publication Date: 1991
Pages: 326
Rating:
  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
 2

5 stars, based on 2 ratings
Publisher: G.P. Putnam's Sons
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

celticscrapper27 avatar reviewed Cold Fire on + 54 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
I just finished this book yesterday and would have to put it in my ten best books of all time. It grabbed me from the beginning, had characters that I felt with, who made sense to me, and just enough descrition so you could see the events without being bogged down in adjectives. I will caution that if you are prone to nightmares, don't read this one at bedtime. Most of the book is pretty positive or at least tame on horror, but there are three or four sections (only one or two pages each) that are pretty graphically scary.
reviewed Cold Fire on + 155 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Humorous and spellbinding. An apparent savior hides many secrets
reviewed Cold Fire on + 149 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Teacher Jim Ironheart, aptly named, is sent by forces unknown to save chosen people in life-threatening situations. By chance, a young but jaded reporter stumbles onto his missions, and joins him to investigate who is controlling him and why. Shared nightmares begin to point to an extraterrestrial influence, and the pair are forced to confront Ironheart's forgotten past for answers. Koontz ( The Bad Place , LJ 12/89), a master at maintaining mystery and suspense, weaves themes from earlier novels into this latest thriller. Even if the ending calls to mind DuMaurier and Hitchcock, Cold Fire contains all the ingredients--likable characters, nail-biting suspense, and above all, unlimited imagination--that will please Koontz's fans.
taosing avatar reviewed Cold Fire on + 76 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Great story about a mysterious man who finds himself (almost literally) with the help of a woman who loves him. Did I happen to mention the ENEMY? An implacable hate filled vile and putrescent being that enters this world through their dreams and which wants them both dead? The man also spends his time being sent around the world, by another unknown entity, to save certain people's lives in the nick of time.
reviewed Cold Fire on + 159 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Teacher Jim Ironheart, aptly named, is sent by forces unknown to save chosen people in life-threatening situations. By chance, a young but jaded reporter stumbles onto his missions, and joins him to investigate who is controlling him and why. Shared nightmares begin to point to an extraterrestrial influence, and the pair are forced to confront Ironheart's forgotten past for answers.
Read All 36 Book Reviews of "Cold Fire"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

reviewed Cold Fire on + 204 more book reviews
I think that Koontz keeps the suspense level high in this book by crossing over many genres. Several interesting philosophical and theological issues come up. I found myself laughing and crying. I enjoyed myself immensely while reading this book. I was very pleased with this book, although it did not end the way I had expected.
reviewed Cold Fire on + 48 more book reviews
anyone who's a fan of koontz knows he basically can't write a bad book, and Cold Fire is no different. I liked this one a little more than most Koontz's that I've read cuz it had a more romantic twist to it, which I like in a book. He definitely needs to weave more romantic themes into his work, he writes them very well
reviewed Cold Fire on + 29 more book reviews
Interesting story line...A man can see into the immediate future using his powers to save lives. He doesn't know where the power stems from and a reporter helps him discover the source.
reviewed Cold Fire on + 57 more book reviews
Another crazy book by Koontz, this is a good one!
reviewed Cold Fire on + 3 more book reviews
Good book, with a different twist for an ending.
reviewed Cold Fire on + 12 more book reviews
Koontz is awesome!
nccorthu avatar reviewed Cold Fire on + 569 more book reviews
A bit different from the usual Koontz But starts exciting
reviewed Cold Fire on + 55 more book reviews
Not usually a Dean Koontz fan, but I have to say this one kept me captivated. I loved it!
reviewed Cold Fire on + 3389 more book reviews
First things first it is in my opinion that Dean Koontz is one of the greatest writers of our time. Dean never seizes to amaze me ,or any reader for that matter, as to how his novels have a spell like effect on the reader. Cold Fire is no exception to this patteren either. In the book a man by the name of Jim Ironheart ,a skitsofrenic telekentic, saves people from allmost certin deaths. Why? Jim saves them because he is working under the powers of a higher being & they hold immportant keys to our (civilization's) future. This book is a flat out must read for any scifi or horror fan.


Genres: