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MindWire #1

MindWire

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Psychologist Paul Clark receives an unusual invitation from Hope psychiatric hospital to undertake therapy with a strangely non-communicative young girl. Discovering that she has unusual memory problems and a hazy background, he soon begins to suspect that the girl is not mentally ill at all and that powerful figures within the hospital are covering up aspects of her past.

Therapy brings about dramatic changes in his patient, but her awakening pulls Paul and his friends into a dangerous world of technological surveillance and psychic espionage, which ultimately questions the very nature of the reality they have so far taken for granted.

120 pages, Kindle Edition

First published December 1, 2013

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Carl Sampson

3 books1 follower

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Peter.
4,082 reviews810 followers
September 2, 2022
Dr Paul Clark has a new case, a young woman named Charlotte. She seems to be a hopeless patient until step by step the truth comes out. She is kept prisoner in a mental institution for psychic experiments. Can Paul save her from shady government scientists and will she be able to escape? The story dragged a bit and was told in a very linear way. Okay characters but nothing that kicks you out of your shoes. The topic is too well chewed and covered by many other authors. Good for in between or those fascinated by secret governmental experiments!
Profile Image for Nathan Mercer.
Author 6 books5 followers
April 3, 2014
"Mindwire" by Carl Sampson is a Psychological Thriller featuring a Psychologist, Paul Clark, and a non-responsive patient by the name of Charlotte. Charlotte is in the Psych Ward of a hospital, which is more like a living death sentence of drug induced compliance. Not really living, and not close to death, Paul Clark is brought in to see if he can tear down the walls between Charlotte and the rest of the world.

What has Charlotte done to be put into the hospital? She had a normal childhood, so no one could figure out why she would snap one and beat up her manager like she was Muhammad Ali. Poor guy didn't even have a chance to try and rope-a-dope...

So what is the real story behind this 5'4" mini tower of terror? Paul starts to get glimpses when he convinces the hospital to reduce the medications she is on... As Charlotte starts to come around, Paul finds that there may be more questions than answers.... One that really has Paul wondering is that Charlotte knows things about him that she should have no clue about.

I found this book to be very action packed and an enjoyable read. The descriptions of life inside a psych ward and the patients futile efforts to convince everyone that they are sane is right on point. I have seen this with my own eyes in the VA hospital system. How do you prove you are sane in that environment? How do you respond to treatment that is only "chemically induced" and no therapy?

I would love to go into the story about Charlotte, but I don't want to give any spoilers. The author has done his research concerning the backstory, as I have read some other books on the topic that ultimately brought her to the hospital.

One of the reviews I read on Amazon said the ending wasn't believable. I am pretty sure that is why it is called "fiction." I don't mean to sound snarky, but if you want reality, read non-fiction. If you want a well written, thought out plot with action and a strong female lead that is not afraid to drop the gloves and go MMA style - then this book is for you.



As for me - I plan on purchasing the second book "Sybil" and read it just because I want to!



Strengths - The plot and pace of action was outstanding. I was able to connect with the characters and their problems. Sampson was able to do this without going overboard on the details (he doesn't take 100 words to say when 10 will do nicely.) The research was spot-on and I just happen to be a fan of the things that he combined and threw some action in on top of it! Grammar and spelling were not an issue.

Weaknesses - I really can't say there were any glaring weaknesses. The only thing that I will say is that the ending scenes did seem to go into areas that I didn't expect it to go into and thought the book would have been fine if it hadn't. That being said - it might have been a set-up for the next two books in this trilogy - and it did not deter from my enjoyment of the book.

1 review
January 2, 2014
Thoroughly enjoyed this book. I thought it was a good, pacy read; a perfect blend of psychological thriller with a paranormal / sci-fi twist. Characters are well-drawn and believable, and I found myself able to identify with them, which is something I always look for in a novel. Looking forward to reading book 2 of this trilogy.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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