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Average rating5
A cerebral PsyFi thriller that will break your heart and then set it free. Think Chuck Palahniuk with soul, supernatural Don DeLillo, occult Murakami, edgy Atwood.-At an exquisite mansion perched on an edenic plateau, twenty-some guests are remembering their dreams as clearly as yesterday. All that's required is to let an eccentric guru called the Diving Man work their subconscious like a snake-charmer. Parts Willy Wonka, Judge Holden, and Tim Leary, he seems to know what can't be known, professes a bizarre philosophy, and spends his days leaping from the cliffs to hold his breath for minutes on end in the churning river below. He is also plotting against the dissolution of the world.The House draws Lynn, an anxious, earnest therapist who foresaw her fiancé's death in a dream. . .or, just maybe, called it into being. This is her last chance to heal, but only if she can come to terms with her dark connection to another seeker-the young logophile Daniel, who is afflicted with a strange disease inextricable from an even stranger gift.
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What if we were able to have lucid dreams and bend reality in the process? Two people's lives that are linked by the existence of a third - a brother and a husband - connected thanks to the dreamworld recreated up in a mansion where a dream cult keeps its adepts from completely waking up. Although the story is relatively simple, its progression is not linear and it will surprises the reader with mind-bending changes and psychedelic introspections. Brad Kelly's prose is exceptional, his choice of words so exquisite and unique that in some chapters the story is just a tool in the background to show his skills as a writer. I'm looking forward to reading his next novel.