![]() ![]() His mother Megan is a gifted painter who has really found her gift in the wake of her husband’s death at a young age. The boy, Woody, is an individual diagnosed with a high functioning form of autism. At the same time, he’s saying good-bye to his human, Dorothy, as she loses her battle with cancer. He doesn’t think the boy realizes he’s transmitting though. ![]() One day Kipp realizes he’s hearing a new voice and that it’s a human boy. He can read and write English in addition to being very empathetic with his human. My love for Teddy makes me predisposed to like any Golden, and Kipp, the golden in Devoted, is no exception. He could also jump like Michael Jordan and loved to chase tennis balls (preferably two or three at a time). Goldens as a breed tend to be the canine equivalent of a warm hug and Ted had a genius for going to the person in the room who needed comfort – even if they didn’t know it themselves. One of them was the most wonderful golden retriever named Teddy. His earlier novel, Watchers, is one of my all-time faves, and this one is similar in subject matter: a golden retriever who is more than he appears to be is up against a monstrous experiment gone wrong in a battle of good versus evil.Ĭircling back to my predisposition to love this newer novel, my family has always had dogs. I feel like I should preface this review with an admission: I was predisposed to love Devoted by Dean Koontz. ![]()
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