Twenty-nine-year-old Guy Sullivan is losing his vision and developing powers of precognition, a talent that could save his life as research specialist Patrick Roach prepares a risky treatment to save his sight, and his vengeful son prepares to unleash a deadly scheme
There are many topics worth discussing from this book. Murder vs assisted-suicide. Prisoners of our own conscious mind. Capability of a 12 year old blinded by religious beliefs. Human test subjects for science.
I've picked my poison and chosen option number two. Are we prisoners trapped within our conscious minds? Is it possible that due to the sensory overload of everyday life, we lack the ability to realise our full potential. Is there more for us to understand? We spend our time on this planet in 'the now', the everyday shite which we believe to be the height of all reasoning.
When was the last time you truly sat down, turned off the TV, put your phone out of arms reach and had a deep think about nothing, anything, everything. It's a part of us which we have lost touch with.
If we practice sensory deprivation like our protagonist Guy, what thoughts/ideas will we encounter? We may encounter our shadow and embrace the darkness and see our ego for what it is.
Not a bad story all in all but the thought-provoking ideas to follow are what made it a good read.
I did not care for this book. Too technical & seemed to drag on. After I was half way through the book, it got interesting. Not a book I would recommend.
I was very disappoint by this book because it is so boring. I had read some of Cooks other books and liked those too. The ending is so unsurprising. I hope Michael Palmer's books are better than this. But I'm not saying I won't read any of Cook's book ever it's just not now because I like variety.