Get out of my Dreams is the first in the Magic Man series
and tells of a man able to control others through hypnosis in their dreams.
Alice has woken up again with her underwear folded neatly on
her shoes and her husband downstairs asleep on the couch with the house alarm
off and the front door unlocked. Her husband is having his own issues as he is
troubled by the disturbing dreams he is having. They call the police and find
out that there is a man out there, who has not been identified, but is able to
get people to bend to his will and divulge dark secrets while sleeping
seemingly under hypnosis. Of course, the police are on high alert about this as
a man who can control others while asleep could be a terrorist. As Alice
continues to dread sleeping, she finds herself in a position where the dreams
she is having are oddly exciting. Kinky, in fact. Alice realises she is able to
talk to the Magic Man and he can guide her dreams. This has serious
repercussions as Alice, a would-be reporter, gets roped in with him to help
police investigations as they enter into people’s dreams as informants and give
the police information that leads to criminal arrests. But even for all the
good that Joe can do, there are always those who will never trust him. The line
is fine and Alice and Joe could find themselves on the wrong side of it.
The idea started off well and I thought the ultimate ability
to catch terrorists was a good one. I did not enjoy the erotic dreams and
scenarios that Joe led some people through though. I thought that the author
did not exactly understand what turned women on, and was using the premise of
an old porn script. In fact, when I found out the author was an older male I
was quite surprised. The erotic parts didn’t throw me until Alice decided to
sleep with cartoon characters in her dreams and the absurdity of this destroyed
any of those parts of the story. So many questions were left unanswered and
when you find out who Joe is and how he fits into the story I had to question
why he continued to create the erotic dreams he did. It almost seemed seedy and
out of character.
There were a number of editing mistakes which tripped up the
speed of reading and I found a lot of parts repeated and unnecessary. There was
a distinctly British feel to the book even though it is based in the US. Overall
the book was very average for me as the idea was great and could have been used
in a much more meaningful way. But hey, different strokes for different folks
(no pun intended).
Thanks to Voracious Readers Only and the author for a copy
of the book.