Author:Dean R. Koontz

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This is an ISFDB Bibliographic Comments page for the author (or artist or editor) Dean R. Koontz. This page may be used for bibliographic comments or extended notes about the author, or discussion on how to the author's works are to be recorded . The link above leads to the ISFDB summary record for Dean R. Koontz. Please use Bio:Dean R. Koontz for a biographical sketch of this person. To discuss what should go on this page, use the talk page. For more on this and other header templates, see Header templates.


Dean Koontz apparently wrote 30 or so erotic books for Cameo books and others early in his career under various pen names. Books that have been attributed to him by others include Skin Summer by "Ann Griffin" (American Art Enterprises, 1983 and Cameo, 1970), Protest Ball by "Ann Griffin" (published by American Art Enterprises in 1989 and originally published in 1970 by Cameo); and Sharing by "Richard Young" (published by Barbizon in 1973, originally published under the title Share the Warm Flesh by "Gracie Amber" in 1970 by Cameo). Dean Koontz has denied having ever written any erotic books with the exceptions of Bounce Girl (Cameo, 1970) which credits Dean Koontz and his wife as authors without benefit of pen names, and the “Leonard Chris” book "Hung", but this is inconsistent prior statements made by Koontz himself, and there is other evidence suggestive of his connection to additional adult books.

In an article written by Dean Koontz entitled "Dean's Drive" in the sci-fi fanzine Energumen #8 (6/71), Dean admitted to writing 30 erotic books in 1970 in addition to Pig Society and The Underground Lifestyles Handbook (both of which were also published by Cameo books in 1970). One of the titles that Dean Koontz admits to having written (at the time he wrote this article) is Thirteen and Ready, which was written under the penname of "Ann Griffin" – the initials A.G. being those of his wife in reverse. In an early sci-fi fanzine, Beabohema #8 (1970), Dean Koontz again talks about writing these adult books for Cameo. Dean Koontz's writing how-to book "How to Write Popular Fiction" (1972) also refers to these books and specifically to the "Ann Griffin" penname. The Library of Congress apparently has confirmed that Gerda Ann Koontz (Dean's wife) holds the copyrights to a number of adult books attributed to Dean Koontz which he now denies having authored.

Additional evidence suggestive of Dean Koontz’s use of these pen names is as follows: The “Ann Griffin” Cameo book Protest Ball lists the author's address as Harrisburg, Pennsylviania, which is where Dean and his wife were living in 1970, the year of its publication. "Ann Griffin" is one of the five names listed in the dedication of the gothic romance Demon Child (which Koontz wrote under the penname of “Deanna Dwyer”). All five of the first names listed in the dedication of Demon Child match the first names of Cameo erotic books that have been attributed to Dean Koontz.

Note: This information is adapted with permission from information provided by online bookseller “fbks68”, who reports verifying all the above information from the original publications. In my own mind, it is not clear without benefit of having read the articles myself how many of these adult books were written by Dean Koontz, how many were written by his wife, and how many they may have collaborated upon.