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240 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1967
"It's strange, but all these people strike me as being asleep. They're all somnambulists."Colin Wilson champions the mind. Even though the "villains" of the novel are its titular mind parasites that exist to create complacency and ignorance, the true villains and the true victims are one and the same: namely, those people who cannot explore within and who create their own boxes to live in, who chain themselves to farcical patterns of behavior and who lose their independence through their reliance on hierarchies. People who have no ability or interest in exploring the world of the imagination:
A man who can withdraw into himself on a long train journey has escaped time and space, while the man who stares out of the window and yawns with boredom has to live through every minute and every mile.Colin Wilson is a dry and deliberate author, disinterested in providing cheap thrills or easy answers, quietly passionate about his ideas, a writer whose prose is calm, studied... polite. The book is an intellectual novel set in a sometimes prescient, sometimes absurdly unrealistic future. Its plot is basically about how a group of people become aware of a threat, begin to quickly evolve (which includes powers!), eventually travel through space, and in a fantastic scene, finally get around to eliminating that threat when the world is on the verge of total nuclear annihilation. It has a positive feeling to it because the author truly believed that humans can become better if they literally put their minds to it. But sometimes he does let his scabrous opinions on the current state of the un-evolved human race surface:
...the human beings who greeted us seemed alien and repulsive, little better than apes. It was suddenly incredible that these morons could inhabit this infinitely beautiful world and yet remain so blind and stupid.Colin Wilson is one of my favorite authors! I really get him.