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Your Heart Belongs to Me: A Novel by Dean Koontz
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Dean Koontz Edition: Mass Market Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2009-10-27 ISBN: 0553591711 Number of pages: 384 Publisher: Bantam Product features: - ISBN13: 9780553591712
- Condition: New
- Notes: BRAND NEW FROM PUBLISHER! 100% Satisfaction Guarantee. Tracking provided on most orders. Buy with Confidence! Millions of books sold!
Book Reviews of Your Heart Belongs to Me: A NovelBook Review: Worst Book I Have Read, Summary: 1 Stars
This book is a definite pass. I'm going to spoil a lot of this book, including the ending, so if you are planning on reading this book no matter what you might want to stop reading my review, less it ruins the book for you.
If you don't know what the book is about the scroll up to read the book description.
Now that you know what the book is about I'll start.
The first problem with this book appears at the beginning. Ryan, the protangonist, discovers he has some heart problem and needs a transplant. In the story his doctor goes through listing possible causes of his health problem, one of the possible causes is poisoning. Now, for a man in Ryan's position it is understandable that he gets slightly paranoid, which he does. Later on, after breaking into his girlfriend's mother's boyfriend's house, he gets a heart byopsy. After the results come in Ryan asks his doctor about the possibility of poisoning, his doctor says that there is no way what is wrong with him was caused by poisoning. Yet, he gets more paranoid. Anyone else in that same situation would be relieved at news like that, it is as though Ryan wants to be poisoned.
So Ryan and his girlfriend decide to get married if he gets a heart transplant. A little while after Ryan wants to switch to another doctor and get on a international organ donor's list, strangely his girlfriend is 100% against this saying that he should just go with the flow, something very few people would want to do if their life was in danger, most people would want to act. So Ryan switches doctors and a month late (might be a bit wrong with the time) he gets his transplant. Then the book skips a year. You find out Ryan's girlfriend left him. Why? Well the book doesn't say till the end. I guess Koont's likes to confuse his readers. A previously engaged couple breaks up after a heart transplant saves one of their lives? Not something most people break up over.
So we get to the point when some girl starts harrasing Ryan, nothing really important there, so let's skip ahead to when the girl is at Ryan's father's house and tells Ryan to come "or else". Ryan gets there finds the girl. She ties him to a chair and starts to tell him some stuff concerning his heart. Turns out it was taken from a still living person by a government that sells the organs of it's opponents to the highest bidder. So she's mad and she decides to take it out, not on the willing participants like the government or doctor, but a innocent bystander. Okay, I can roll with that. I'll just say she's a little crazy and I can see a crazy person wanting to go for the person who recieved the heart. So it goes on. She talks, cuts him up a bit, shoots his ear. Anyway she eventually has a sudden change of heart and walks out of the room without a word. In my opinion Koonts didn't want Ryan to die and was too lazy to make something believable up. We already determined that she was crazy, else she would have gone for someone who knew what was going on over Ryan, yet a crazy person wouldn't stop when they were that close. Yes they might regret killing someone after the act, but not in the middle. No, in the middle the person would be overjoyed at having suceeded. Now a sane person would stop in the middle, but a sane person would also have gone for someone guilty.
So Ryan lives and it skips ahead a year. Ryan gave away all of his wealth and now lives at a orphanage/dog-washing place. Odd combination but whatever. The real problem is that Ryan, an innocent bystander, gave away his fortune in guilt. Guilt is, of course, understandable, but I don't see why someone would give away all their wealth after they were a victim to a crime and an unwilling participant of some organ-selling organization. If anything Ryan would use his money to get the word out about what is going on, or get proof that his old doctor was involved about it and give it to the authorities (a bit more on how he'd do this later on). Instead he washes dogs and works with orphans. And what makes this even less believable is that at point in the story Ryan would think about his childhood when he was poor and how much he hated it, not exactly the kind of person you'd think would give up their wealth so easily.
It just so happens that Ryan's ex-girlfriend is driving by for a book-signing tour and she decides to stop by. So they talk and guess what it turns out Ryan's ex knew about the doctor the entire time. Personally I find that rather confusing...I mean, most people would tell their loved ones something that important. Also how did a poor (at the time) journalist figure that out when a Ryan couldn't. Throughout the book Ryan is calling upon some source of his to get information on people, or to break into people's houses without leaving a trace. I guess it never crossed his mind that he should check this doctor out huh? (Those sources would be how he could get proof on his old doctor, as brought up last paragraph).
Overall there are many plot holes in the story that left me thinking I would never read another Koonts novel again, which is a shame. Koonts can be a great author, I've read Odd Thomas by him and loved it. But for some reason this book is horrible, maybe he had a migrain or something while writing and editing it. Try another book, there are many better ones.
Summary of Your Heart Belongs to Me: A Novel For one man, they are the five most terrifying words of all . . .
One year after the heart transplant that saved his life, thirty-five-year-old Ryan Perry has never felt better. He?s getting back everything he nearly lost forever?his business, his his life, and, with luck, his beloved girlfriend. Miracles do happen.
Then the unmarked gifts begin to arrive?a box of candy hearts, a heart pendant. Most disturbing of all is a graphic heart-surgery video and its chilling message: Your heart belongs to me. Ryan is being stalked by someone who feels entitled to everything he has. She?s the spitting image of the twenty-six-year-old donor of the heart beating steadily in Ryan?s own chest. And she?s come to take it back. Book Description From the #1 New York Times bestselling master of suspense comes a riveting thriller that probes the deepest terrors of the human psyche?and the ineffable mystery of what truly makes us who we are. Here a brilliant young man finds himself fighting for his very existence in a battle that starts with the most frightening words of all? At thirty-four, Internet entrepreneur Ryan Perry seemed to have the world in his pocket?until the first troubling symptoms appeared out of nowhere. Within days, he?s diagnosed with incurable cardiomyopathy and finds himself on the waiting list for a heart transplant; it?s his only hope, and it?s dwindling fast. Ryan is about to lose it all?his health, his girlfriend Samantha, and his life. One year later, Ryan has never felt better. Business is good and he hopes to renew his relationship with Samantha. Then the unmarked gifts begin to appear?a box of Valentine candy hearts, a heart pendant. Most disturbing of all, a graphic heart surgery video and the chilling message: Your heart belongs to me. In a heartbeat, the medical miracle that gave Ryan a second chance at life is about to become a curse worse than death. For Ryan is being stalked by a mysterious woman who feels entitled to everything he has. She?s the spitting image of the twenty-six-year-old donor of the heart beating steadily in Ryan?s own chest. And she?s come to take it back. Amazon Exclusive Essay: Dean Koontz on Writing Your Heart Belongs to Me I have been asked by the secret masters of Amazon how much research into transplant surgery I did before writing Your Heart Belongs to Me. I would like to reveal that, in the interest of accuracy and the accumulation of vivid detail, and because I bring total commitment to my writing, I underwent a heart transplant myself, even though I didn't need one. This would be a lie, however, and people without a sense of humor would write by the hundreds to accuse me of taking a perfectly good heart needed by some patient who really needed it. To prepare for this novel, I read a few books on the subject of transplants, watched two educational films during which I passed out repeatedly at the sight of blood, and spoke with a few medical specialists in the field--largely to ascertain how they manage not to pass out in surgery every time they expose the pulsing internal organs of a patient. Ryan Perry, the lead of Your Heart Belongs to Me, is 34, wealthy from the Internet social-networking site that he created, with an ideal life ahead of him. Then he learns he suffers from cardiomyopathy and will die within a year if he does not undergo a heart transplant. The procedure is successful, but a year later he begins to receive gifts--such as a heart-shaped locket--with the message "Your heart belongs to me. I want it back." Although it might seem to be a ghost story, Your Heart Belongs to Me is something else entirely. In addition to being a thriller with a medical procedure as a key element, it is an unusual love story. Those who have never read my books--we know who you are--might be surprised to learn that more often than not, a love story is part of the mix. In a romantic relationship, we're vulnerable; and when a character in a novel is vulnerable, we are more likely to worry about him or her and to relate more intimately to the story. Furthermore, people in love have something precious to lose, and in their sometimes desperate efforts to hold fast to that love, they reveal themselves more profoundly than they might otherwise. In the early years of my career--or what we here in Koontzland call "the long slog"--publishers resisted me when I wanted to mix genres. These days, my publisher encourages me to pursue fresh ways of telling stories. Consequently, Your Heart Belongs to Me is a suspense novel and love story with a thread of the supernatural weaving through it, set against a backdrop of medicine and medical mystery, concerning certain issues of ethics that are timeless--and others that are unique to our time. And I promise you that the medical detail is not so graphic that you will pass out. A Q&A with Dean Koontz Q: Your Heart Belongs to Me is very suspenseful but at the same time an affecting love story. How difficult was this to pull off? A: Well, life is full of suspense and, if we're lucky, it's full of love as well. From minute to minute and day to day, we never know what will happen to us, good or bad, so suspense is the fundamental condition of existence. That doesn't change when we fall in love or when we love a child or a sibling or a great dog. In fact, the more we love, the more we have to lose, which puts a sharper edge on the suspense in life and in Your Heart Belongs to Me. Ryan Perry, the lead of the story, enjoys self-made wealth and good health and the love of a good woman--so when all that starts to slip away from him, it's actually easier for me to move readers to the edge of their seats and keep them there. Q: Your books are full of details about how things work in the real world--like life in a monastery in Brother Odd, the management of a great Bel Air estate and the intricacies of police work in The Face, Your Heart Belongs to Me is rich with details about medical conditions and heart transplants. Since you don't specialize in one kind of novel, how do you learn about all these different things? Do you engage in a lot of Internet research? A: I never go on-line. My writing schedule and other obligations keep me busy 18/7. The other six hours, I sleep. I know that I am a potentially obsessive personality and that it's easy to become obsessed with one aspect or another of the Internet, until hours a day are consumed by it. Therefore, I stay away. I do most of my research from books and publications, and by conducting interviews with specialists in whatever fields my story will touch upon. One of my assistants is on-line, and in a pinch, if I can't turn up a fact I need, she can get it for me. As a high-school and college student, I hated research and libraries. I always shamelessly made up the facts in reports that I wrote, and cited nonexistent books by nonexistent writers in my footnotes. And I always got away with it! But as a novelist, I've been surprised to find that I greatly enjoy doing research. I think the difference is--in school, they told me what I had to learn, and I bristled at authority; when I chose the subject, I proved to be an industrious autodidact. Q: Your hero in Your Heart Belongs to Me, Ryan Perry, is different from your other heroes, like Odd Thomas and Mitchell Rafferty and Tim Carrier. What was it about the story you were telling in Your Heart Belongs to Me that required this change? A: Most of my heroes come from ordinary occupations--a fry cook, a baker, a mason, a gardener, a bartender--which makes them like many of my friends in real life. But Ryan Perry in Your Heart Belongs to Me has made a couple hundred million from an Internet business. For this story, I needed a hero who, at the opening, has everything: he's wealthy, he has a beautiful girlfriend whom he loves and who loves him, he essentially leads a life of leisure at 34, he's vigorous and handsome and charming.... And then everything that really matters begins to slip away from him. He had to be at the top in order to be at risk of a long fall. As he begins to think that some people in his life are involved in a conspiracy to kill him, he needed to be a man of exceptional resources to pursue that investigation. Q: Where did the idea for Your Heart Belongs to Me come from? A: I was on the phone with a friend, talking about a smorgasbord of things, when the subject of heart transplants came up, and he told me something, an anecdote, that astonished me. Before I hung up, I had spun that small fact into a story that I couldn't wait to write. I've already made it clear to him that he gets no royalties! Story ideas have come to me from lines in songs, from a scrap of overheard conversation, from just about everywhere. And sometimes a story pops into my head, and I have no idea what the source of it was. Thank God this keeps happening; otherwise I might have to learn an honest trade like plumbing. Q: What is next for you? Another Odd Thomas novel? A: There will be three more Odd Thomas novels, but my book for spring 2009 is not one of them. It's titled The Other Side of the Woods and is in the vein of Life Expectancy. I'm having great fun with it. Even when writing is hard, I always have fun with it. In fact, the harder it is, the more fun it is, because the challenge is what makes the work worthwhile.
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