Your heart belongs to me

Dean R. Koontz, 1945-

Large print - 2008

One year after Ryan Perry receives a heart transplant he starts receiving unmarked gifts in the mail, a heart pendant, a box of Valentine candy, a heart surgery video and a chilling message "Your heart belongs to me".

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LARGE PRINT/FICTION/Koontz, Dean R.
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Subjects
Published
New York : Random House Large Print 2008.
Language
English
Main Author
Dean R. Koontz, 1945- (-)
Edition
1st large print ed
Item Description
Originally published: New York : Bantam Books, 2008.
Physical Description
448 p. (large print) ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780739328095
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Self-made dot-com multimillionaire Ryan Perry is a handsome, superbly fit, still-surfing 34. Sudden serious chest pain leads to the diagnosis of an enlarged heart, for which transplantation is the only possible life-sustaining fix. Ryan lets the paranoia he could profitably control while making his fortune run away with him both before and after the successful operation. He can't substantiate his fears beforehand, but a year of new-hearted life later, they physically assault him in the form of a beautiful Chinese woman who says he has her heart. Koontz doesn't start his new thriller auspiciously, bathing his unsympathetic protagonist in tinny metaphors and bland scene-painting. For the first several pages and at times later, you want to toss the book aside because it so resembles ad copy. Mercifully soon it dawns that Ryan is a Hitchcockian antihero, like, say, Roger O. Thornhill (Cary Grant) in North by Northwest. You identify with him despite his shallowness and self-absorption, at first because he's in life-threatening trouble but ultimately because his subsequent ordeal rouses an underlying decency in him that only Samantha, his lover at the book's opening (but not ending), sees from the start, and that he must very nearly die, though not from a bad heart, to bring out in himself. This isn't among the most congenial of Koontz's moral thrillers, but it is definitely one of the most thoughtfully developed.--Olson, Ray Copyright 2008 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

After the sophistication and ingenuity of such recent Hitchcockian thrillers as The Husband and The Good Guy, bestseller Koontz stumbles inÅthis pallid effort. Ryan Kelly, a 34-year-oldÅInternet entrepreneur, has it all, including an attractive journalist girlfriend he wants to marry, Samantha Reach, and a house in a gated community in Newport Coast, Calif. Harsh reality intrudes when he learns he has a serious heart defect and must get a transplant. Fortunately, a compatible donor turns up in time, but then someone launches a reign of psychological terror that leaves Ryan suspicious of Samantha and his longtime servants. The ultimate plot payoff is unworthy of this gifted author, as are patches of ponderous prose ("With the moon still tethered to the eastern horizon but straining higher, with the giant pepper tree occluding most of the eternally receding stars, the time to talk of death had come"). Koontz fans can only hope for a return to form next time. (Nov. 25) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

The shadowy woman stalking heart transplant survivor Ryan Perry has one demand--she wants her heart back. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Chapter One Ryan Perry did not know that something in him was broken. At thirty-four, he appeared to be more physically fit than he had been at twenty-four. His home gym was well equipped. A personal trainer came to his house three times a week. On that Wednesday morning in September, in his bedroom, when he drew open the draperies and saw blue sky as polished as a plate, and the sea blue with the celestial reflection, he wanted surf and sand more than he wanted breakfast. He went on-line, consulted a surfcast site, and called Samantha. She must have glanced at the caller-ID readout, because she said, "Good morning, Winky." She occasionally called him Winky because on the afternoon that she met him, thirteen months previously, he had been afflicted with a stubborn case of myokymia, uncontrollable twitching of an eyelid. Sometimes, when Ryan became so obsessed with writing software that he went thirty-six hours without sleep, a sudden-onset tic in his right eye forced him to leave the keyboard and made him appear to be blinking out a frantic distress signal in Morse code. In that myokymic moment, Samantha had come to his office to interview him for an article that she had been writing for Vanity Fair. For a moment, she had thought he was flirting with her-and flirting clumsily. During that first meeting, Ryan wanted to ask for a date, but he perceived in her a seriousness of purpose that would cause her to reject him as long as she was writing about him. He called her only after he knew that she had delivered the article. "When Vanity Fair appears, what if I've savaged you?" she had asked. "You haven't." "How do you know?" "I don't deserve to be savaged, and you're a fair person." "You don't know me well enough to be sure of that." "From your interviewing style," he said, "I know you're smart, clear-thinking, free of political dogma, and without envy. If I'm not safe with you, then I'm safe nowhere except alone in a room." He had not sought to flatter her. He merely spoke his mind. Having an ear for deception, Samantha recognized his sincerity. Of the qualities that draw a bright woman to a man, truthfulness is equaled only by kindness, courage, and a sense of humor. She had accepted his invitation to dinner, and the months since then had been the happiest of his life. Now, on this Wednesday morning, he said, "Pumping six-footers, glassy and epic, sunshine that feels its way deep into your bones." "I've got a deadline to meet." "You're too young for all this talk about death." "Are you riding another train of manic insomnia?" "Slept like a baby. And I don't mean in a wet diaper." "When you're sleep-deprived, you're treacherous on a board." "I may be radical, but never treacherous." "Totally insane, like with the shark." "That again. That was nothing." "Just a great white." "Well, the bastard bit a huge chunk out of my board." "And-what?-you were determined to get it back?" "I wiped out," Ryan said, "I'm under the wave, in the murk, grabbin' for air, my hand closes around what I think is the skeg." The skeg, a fixed fin on the bottom of a surfboard, holds the stern of the board in the wave and allows the rider to steer. What Ryan actually grabbed was the shark's dorsal fin. Samantha said, "What kind of kamikaze rides a shark?" "I wasn't riding. I was taken for a ride." "He surfaced, Excerpted from Your Heart Belongs to Me by Dean Koontz All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.