Wednesday, September 4, 2019
The Vision :: essays research papers
   The Vision by Dean Koontz Most people are skeptical    about psychics and psychic powers. In the book The Vision    by Dean Koontz, there arises a real convincing psychic    Mary, who has visions of murders that are yet to happen.    But, a new twist to the story causes Mary to see a different    kind of vision. Murders more gruesome than ever. More    difficult to see. Harder to pursue. All these factors cause the    reader , and possibly be someone she loves? Or maybe a    haunting truth about the past. The story takes place in    various locations of modern day California. Some of the    story takes place in Los Angeles, but the most momentous    part of the story takes place in a little town called King's    Point. The town is on the Pacific Coast Highway, and    expensive houses dot the shoreline. Pertaining to the visions,    Dean Koontz vividly describes the scene of each of them, as    they take place. For example, he takes the reader to one of    the scenes of a murder. A small beauty shop in Santa Ana,    California. He forces the reader to picture the various    aspects of a normal beauty shop, such as, the exterior. The    neon lights, the palm tree, the jade-plant hedges, and the    money-scented air. He informs the reader of the scent of the    shampoo, cream rinse cologne, and perspiration. He tells    how the floor was covered in air, and the purple color of the    walls, and the plush purple carpet. He describes the sound    of the hair dryer and the gunshot in which the murderer shot    the cashier. As one can see, the author thoroughly describes    the setting. The main character is of course, Mary Bergen.    She is the author of a syndicated newspaper column about    psychic phenomena, and the one who pursues the visions in    which the murderer creates. The true identity of the murderer    is not clear until the end of the book. Max Bergen, Mary's    husband, and Alan Tanner, Mary's brother, each try to help    Mary pursue her visions to catch the killer, and to free    Mary's life of the horrible stress that encompasses her. But    Max and Alan don't get along very well. Alan feels that    Mary could of picked a better man to marry, because he    believes that all Max is after is Mary's money, and that Max    doesn't really realize how fragile she is. Max knows how    Alan feels, but obviously disagrees. Max is pretty a strong    man, six inches taller, and forty pounds heavier then Alan.    Although Max had promised Mary that he would never    physically fight another person, he feels a strong need to fight    Alan, but knows that won't stop him from being so arrogant.  					    
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