Your Heart Belongs to Me
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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
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? 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? 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? Q: Where did the idea for Your Heart Belongs to Me come from? Q: What is next for you? Another Odd Thomas novel? |
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| 11-30-08 | 1 | (NA) |
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While reading this book I thought there was going to be a great payoff at the end. There just had to be, after pages and pages of filler. I wouldn't even bother to read the first part of the book as it has nothing to do with anything after the transplant. There were too many loose ends to count. The ending was very unsatisfactory. Why is it that a whole nation plus countless others were responsible for the big bad thing, Koontz's villain only blames the RICH hero? I also find it very unlikely once the hero figures everything out his life is changed so profoundly.
I think we are at the start of a new political correctness, being ashamed of and having to apologize for being rich. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-30 12:08:21 EST)
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| 11-29-08 | 4 | (NA) |
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I liked this book. Koontz' earlier books were his best, and the "odd" series I found tedious. But this one is more like it. I enjoyed very much and it kept my attention. I know when a book is good when I can't put it down until I have finished it. I'm still waiting for Frankenstein #3!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-30 12:08:21 EST)
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| 11-28-08 | 2 | 1\1 |
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I'm listing this book on Ebay. I didn't like it at all! I am/was a huge Koontz fan! He was my favorite author for over 15 years! I don't know what happened to him, but I miss him!
This book is slow & boring. It has no depth. The characters are lifeless. It's like the telling of a story but "making a long story short" except normally when a person does that, they tell all the best parts. It seemed to me that a lot of those "best parts" were left out. I gave the book one star for potential, another star because the author is Koontz. I don't recommend this book to anyone. However, I do recommend the majority of the books Koontz has written. Especially his much older works. They are simply fantastic! Watchers, Strangers, Lightning, Midnight, & many others. Even though his newer stuff doesn't pack the same punch, there are many good books filled with scary bad stuff. The good guy prevaling by the seat of his pants & having a lot of wit & humor. You will be scared yet laughing! If you can't find his other books on Amazon, you can always check your library. The free way to decide if you like/want a book. This will be my future method in regard to dear Koontz's books. I wish I loved 'Your Heart Belongs to Me' I really do. Next stop, Ebay. I have a book to list! (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-30 12:04:57 EST)
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| 11-28-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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Dean Koontz is one of the best fiction writers I have read. This book maintains his lofty standards. The work focuses on Ryan Perry, a super-rich entrepreneur who made his fortune developing a social-networking Web site. He's only thirty-four and seems to have it all, including a beautiful lover, Samantha Reach, whom he seeks to wed. Then he discovers that he is gravely ill with a bad heart. And, it turns out, "bad heart" has both literal and figurative implications.
As usual, Koontz introduces supernatural elements. Dreams are important and subject to sinister interpretations. Ryan suspects people, including Samantha, may be poisoning him or plotting against him. He desperately looks for answers, even in the eyes of a corpse. Eventually, he receives a healthy new heart through transplant. All seems well. But things may not be as they seem. All the while, there's an ominous tapping, rapping. Yes, just like in Poe's "The Raven," phrases from which, and other Poe works, Koontz weaves into the story. For example, Koontz writes "eagerly he sought" alternative treatments for his heart disease. Referring to Ryan, Koontz used the same words as Poe in "The Raven." Ultimately, Ryan recognizes how the "unmistakable style of Poe, his essential voice, seemed of a piece with the strange events of the past sixteen months." This Poe motif is a brilliant part of the book. It all builds to a strong conclusion. A most enjoyable read, with only a few arcane phrasings like "plein-air" claustrophobia standing in the way. And I don't understand how "the darkness darkled into something darker than mere dark" made it into print. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-30 12:04:57 EST)
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| 11-28-08 | 1 | 1\4 |
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I was very disappointed with this book. I was over 150 pages into the book before I was "past" what it said on the book jacket. I also didn't like that so much of the book was contrived and I didn't think there was enough happening. I thought there were a lot of loose ends too. I will definately not pre-order his next book before thumbing through it myself!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-30 12:04:57 EST)
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| 11-27-08 | 5 | 1\5 |
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Koontz has a thrilling page turner with this one. I was not so smitten with his last thriller, but this is first class. I also loved Michele Cozzens' It's Not Your Mother's Bridge Club
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-30 01:16:06 EST)
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| 11-26-08 | 5 | 4\5 |
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I could hardly wait to leave work yesterday so that I could rush to a nearby bookstore to get this book. It had taken great strength of character not to run to the grocery store at midnight, just in case they had stocked it in their book section.
So, as you can see, I really enjoy Mr. Koontz's books. They are always extremely entertaining, often frightening, sometimes unforgetable. This time, they are also thought-provoking. The protagonist is a dotcom millionaire. In fact, he has it all -- wealth, a sweetheart he loves, a life of luxury at 34. Then he discovers he has an incurable heart condition and will most likely die within one year unless he gets a transplant. As the story unfolds, we wonder if his condition is creating some sort of paranoia, or is his condition caused by some sort of vast conspiracy. Almost miraculously, he gets his new heart after only a 4-month wait. But why is he now getting messages from someone who apparently wants their heart back?? Who or what is stalking him? This is really effective and frightening. I don't want to say anything else so that I don't spoil the marvelous end to this book. So I will say only that I hope you read it and enjoy it! Now I have to wait till next May for my next Koontz fix! Hope it's as good as this one! (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-28 03:31:39 EST)
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| 11-26-08 | 5 | 2\3 |
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Much better than his last novel,
very hard to put down, a real page turner. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-28 03:31:39 EST)
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| 11-25-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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I literally could not put down YOUR HEART BELONGS TO ME. The words flowed and Dean Koontz is at his best. (Alas - no dogs however.)
That said, even though I loved the book - I hated the ending. Without giving anything away, with all MY heart, I believe that it is a sin NOT to greedily cling to every single day when there is quality of life or the hope of that life. We are each given the extraordinary gift of life and we have an "obligation," if you will, to live each day to its fullest. To not fight to make each day count is to squander this amazing and precious gift. This hit close to home as my own father was a commanding officer in Special Ops. He died at age 44 - after cheating death many times. It was this immense instinct to survive which enabled him to be the sole survivor of a platoon in Vietnam and later to endure a cancer operation with only a 2% success rate and live 7 more years. Do I believe that some lives are more "important" than others? Yes - as politically incorrect as it sounds - I do. Is the life of, let's say, Dean Koontz himself more important than a drunk on the streets? In my opinion - yes. Not because of fame or wealth or because a gazillion people read him- but rather because just like Ryan Perry - his life has been fully lived and not wasted; his life has counted. He has championed good causes; is unpretentious; passionately loves one woman; and continues to work hard each day to utilize the talents that have been given to him. To fight ferociously and cling to this life tenaciously with every fiber of your being is to hold firm to the belief that there is a purpose in each day. Is there a moral line that you do not cross in pursuit of that life? Yes. I think there is. For me personally, I think would cross that line for a loved one before I would cross it for myself. YOUR HEART BELONGS TO ME takes the Reader on a magical journey to explore a great deal of truths and responsibilities. In the end, each man must decide for himself in what direction his own moral compass lies. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-28 03:31:39 EST)
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| 11-25-08 | 4 | 7\8 |
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Thirty-four year old Internet billionaire Ryan Perry gets a life saving heart transplant, only to become the target of creepy psychological threats from a woman resembling the heart donor, who has a terrifying message for him: "Your heart belongs to me." Fearing for his life and his livelihood, Ryan's natural reaction to this strange, scary situation is to discount any supernatural explanation, which leads him to mistrust those closest to him, including his girlfriend and his employees. Koontz's strength has long been his knack for putting regular people into dangerous, extraordinary situations (often with paranormal overtones) and having them struggle to understand and overcome their plight. In my opinion he succeeds again with Ryan Perry (a regular guy even though he's super-rich) in "Your Heart Belongs To Me," a suspenseful page turner with a likable protagonist and a relentless villain. Also recommended: "A STRANGER LIES THERE"- the Editorial Review of the other major online bookseller said this mystery "is an appealing blend of SoCal noir and psychological suspense à la Dean Koontz. Two thumbs way up."
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-28 03:31:39 EST)
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| 11-25-08 | 5 | 4\4 |
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I look forward every spring and fall to the two Koontz books that I know will come as surely as the seasons change. I have yet to be disappointed in any of his books and I can also say that for Your Heart Belongs to Me. I know that some Dean Koontz fans are disappointed when a new book doesn't resemble each and every book he has already written. It is a matter of perspective. I enjoy the variety that Koontz serves up.
Your Heart Belongs to Me fits nicely with books such as The Husband and The Good Guy; stories that deal with psychological stress on the protagonist and by extension the reader. The story here is strong and certainly plausible. Ryan Perry, a self made millionaire is living the life most of us would do anything to have. Bright, rich, popular, Perry is living the American dream. Then, like so many of us have experienced, that charmed life is threatened by a medical crisis, in this case, cardiomyopathy, a condition that can't be corrected without a heart transplant. Short of that, the condition is a death sentence. Since Ryan is young and vibrant, and has the money, a viable heart is found and life is once again becomes good. Well, maybe. In no time Ryan's life turns creepy; perhaps the transplant won't work out. This is where Koontz excels, finding the weird in the normal everyday things we all take for granted. Then, of course, who is really behind it all? Dean Koontz does a wonderful job developing the story though some may feel it is just a bit contrived. I don't! The characters are certainly believable, the story is well developed, and in classic Koontz style, wastes no time in grabbing your attention and moving you along. I highly recommend. Peace to all. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-28 03:31:39 EST)
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| 11-25-08 | 5 | 0\1 |
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I literally could not put down YOUR HEART BELONGS TO ME and read it in one sitting. The words flowed and Dean Koontz is at his best. (Alas - no dogs however.)
That said, even though I loved the book - I hated the ending. Without giving any plot away - with all MY heart, I believe that it is a sin NOT to greedily cling to every single day when there is quality of life or the hope of that life. We are each given the extraordinary gift of life and we have an "obligation," if you will, to live each day to its fullest. To not fight to make each day count is to squander this amazing and precious gift. My father was a commanding officer in Special Ops. He died at age 44 - after cheating death many times. It was this immense instinct to survive which enabled him to be the sole survivor of a platoon in Vietnam and later to endure a cancer operation with only a 2% success rate and live 7 more years. Do I believe that some lives are more "important" than others? Yes. Is the life of, let's say, Dean Koontz himself more important than a drunk on the streets? In my opinion - yes. Not because of fame or wealth or because a gazillion people read him- but rather because just like Ryan Perry - his life has been fully lived and not wasted; his life has counted. He has championed good causes; is unpretentious; passionately loves one woman; and continues to work hard each day to utilize the talents that have been given to him. To fight ferociously and cling to this life tenaciously with every fiber of your being is to hold firm to the belief that there is a purpose in each day. Is there a moral line that you do not cross in pursuit of that life? Yes. I think there is. For me personally, I think would cross that line for a loved one before I would cross it for myself. YOUR HEART BELONGS TO ME takes the Reader on a magical journey to explore a great deal of truths and responsibilities. In the end, each man must decide for himself in what direction his own moral compass lies. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-26 01:54:08 EST)
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