"All shall be well, and all manner of thing shall be well.” --Julian of Norwich


Force Field

Force Field

A stranger left on a high desert road…
An institute where research into the psyche takes a wrong turn…
A doctor who slowly becomes aware of an alien force…

Driving home at dusk, Dr. Kate Morgan gives a ride to Wyn Roberts, stranded by the side of the road, unaware he has been waiting for her, assigned to her from the reaches of another galaxy.

When severe migraines and hallucinations incapacitate Wyn as he adjusts to Earth’s vibrational force field, he becomes a patient at Bellingham, the isolated sanatorium where Kate works. She gradually realizes that he is also the object of experiments by their director, whose actions stretch the boundaries of ethics and sanity.

As she searches for ways to defend and protect Wyn and the other patients, Kate’s perception of reality, grounded in the scientific method, becomes altered. She begins to wonder–what if migraines and symptoms of schizophrenia were not signs of illness after all, but catalysts for an evolution of perception into other worlds—or even a way for other worlds, other dimensions, to merge with those on earth?

She must come to terms with what she discovers about Wyn Roberts and with her own capacity to allow the force field to stop evil and allow healing.


“This writer placed me alone in a vast desert, locked me in an asylum where cures and sabotage were in a life and death struggle, and took me inside seemingly troubled minds that revealed exciting dimensions. I read it twice.” Amazon review ★★★★★

This plot is grabs to and will not let you go in several ways. At times it is very difficult to wade through the. Psycho babble that the main characters take us through it is very stimulating to bring all this together in a well thought out presentation. As a lover of time travel stories I thought this was where this was headed but was pleasantly surprised by the potential of other realms, consciences, perception, dimensions or worlds. Very thought provoking. Very little action, all in your mind. Reminds me of NBC’s current virtual reality program “Reverie”. Amazon review ★★★★★

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Book categories: Science Fiction