Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Dean Koontz

I have been reading a few Dean Koontz novels lately, and have been enjoying myself quite thoroughly. The last four I've read I've barely been able to put down. They are thrillers, and a bit different from the normal type of novel I read. They are all based around the mind; manipulation, enhancement, supernatural and psychic abilities.

One I read was False Memory, about brainwashing, and how a highly reputed psychiatrist was able to gain complete control of people's minds and make them do his bidding. Given his egotistical and sociopath tendencies these tasks turned into murders and suicides. It is only once our main characters start noticing segments missing in their own lives and sudden onset autophobia (fear of yourself) and the apparent suicide of a best friend (who had sudden onset agoraphobia), that suspicions are raised.

It made me think about mental illness. Mental illness is spoken about a lot more often than it used to. Yet, in my experience it still isn't discussed a lot. Perhaps it's just me, and the circles in which I socialise, are sheltered, but I feel like it isn't. As I'm reading through the book, I vividly imagine what the characters are going through and feel the fear and confusion they are going through (the sign of a good writer and my active imagination). I imagined feeling her autophobia, I imagined my life if I had agoraphobia; it would be horrible, and unbearable.

In False Memory the signs of the mental illness were obvious; panic attacks and extreme behaviour. But it was the little things that led to the discovery of the underlying reason.

I am recommending Dean Koontz's books at the moment. So far, in the last 2 weeks I have read 5 of his novels. False Memory, By the Light of the Moon, Fear Nothing, Sole Survivor and Odd Hours (I will finish this one today).

No comments:

Post a Comment