cobalt79 Wrote:You are correct Ken, touch is very important for healing and for so many other things. Children and adults benefit from human touch. As do animals.
Another question since I've just finished reading Mirage. I posted this in the reading thread, so forgive the redundancy!.....but at the end of the book, where the publisher places adverts for future stories, there was mention of an upcoming FPW book called DNA Wars. Was this renamed or am I missing another book?
Maggers Wrote:I thought I'd resurrect this thread and post a comment I'd written elsewhere on the board but couldn't find. I pulled it from my own files...Thanks for that wonderful analogy Maggers! I just finished Mirage and was struck with the imagery of all the hands of Sam grasping for Julie, as if each stage of Sam's life suffered and now drew upon Julie's good memories to help bring her back.
SPOILER ALERT FOR “THE HAUNTED AIR” AND “MIRAGE”
I was struck by an interesting visual link between two FPW books.
In “The Haunted Air,” when Charles and Gia are trapped in the basement by the ghost of Tara Portman, they fall into a deep pit. As the dirt walls begin to crumble, Charlie gives Gia one of the “crosses” from the stones in the wall, and she uses it to create hand and foot holds in the dirt walls. As she does so, she comes across bones of children buried in the cellar. Fighting back her fear, Gia continues to dig and begins to rise toward the lip of the pit. Suddenly ghostly little hands emerge from the dirt walls and grab Gia and Charlie, preventing them from escaping. Using the “cross,” Gia slices her way through the hands that continue to multiply, until dozens of little hands are grasping her and it seems she will never get out alive.
In “Mirage,” Julie is in the volcano of Samantha’s mind. She is desperate to connect the severed ends of a bridge that traverses a lava flow and which is a critical connection between parts of Sam’s unconscious mind. After digging deep within herself and tapping newly discovered parts of her own emotional psyche, Julie sees a response from Sam. The response comes in the form of little hands on either end of the ruptured bridge, reaching out and caressing Julie. At first, the hands are those of a tiny child, but they begin to multiply and blossom into dozens of hands from every phase of Sam’s life, little girl through adulthood.
FPW is a physician, a man with healing hands. The laying on of hands is part of medical care, not in a mystical fashion but quite literally. Every physician must use his/her hands to examine the patient.
The imagery is unique and interesting, don’t you think?
cobalt79 Wrote:I was hoping this was the case. I just started Deep as The Marrow....Masque is next in line to be read.
Thanks!
Maggers Wrote:Cobalt, I think you're gonna LOVE "Deep as the Marrow." It's my absolute favorite non-RJ book and has THE greatest heroine in all of fiction, IMHO. I love Poppy. I want more Poppy.I think I remember you mentioning Poppy in other reading threads. Thanks!
cobalt79 Wrote:Thanks for that wonderful analogy Maggers! I just finished Mirage and was struck with the imagery of all the hands of Sam grasping for Julie, as if each stage of Sam's life suffered and now drew upon Julie's good memories to help bring her back.
Maggers Wrote:I was struck by an interesting visual link between two FPW books.
Ken Valentine Wrote:SPOILER! Highlight to read it.
(spoiler text removed)
Ken V.
Ken Valentine Wrote:SPOILER! Highlight to read it.
Ken V.