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  • The Mind Parasites

  • The Supernatural, Metaphysical Cult Thriller
  • By: Colin Wilson
  • Narrated by: Raphael Corkhill
  • Length: 8 hrs and 23 mins
  • 4.3 out of 5 stars (16 ratings)

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The Mind Parasites

By: Colin Wilson
Narrated by: Raphael Corkhill
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Summary

Wilson has blended H. P. Lovecraft's dark vision with his own revolutionary philosophy and unique narrative powers to produce a stunning, high-tension story of vaulting imagination. A professor makes a horrifying discovery while excavating a sinister archaeological site. For over 200 years, mind parasites have been lurking in the deepest layers of human consciousness, feeding on human life force and steadily gaining a foothold on the planet. Now they threaten humanity's extinction. They can be fought with one weapon only: the mind, pushed to - and beyond - its limits. Pushed so far that humans can read each other's thoughts, that the moon can be shifted from its orbit by thought alone. Pushed so that man can at last join battle with the loathsome parasites on equal terms.

©1967 Colin Wilson (P)2015 Audible, Inc.
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An Author who should be a star on Audible!

Would you listen to The Mind Parasites again? Why?

Absolutely!
This is one of my favourite books

What did you like best about this story?

The intrigue and author's skill at interweaving retro and futuristic elements.

Have you listened to any of Raphael Corkhill’s other performances? How does this one compare?

Have not listened to any other examples - but this is good, and engaging.

Any additional comments?

Colin Wilson is an author who could be featured far more in the audio-book genre. The Occult, Mysteries and many of his novels would be astounding audio content. Not to mention the 'Outsider' a book still in print after 60 years!

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4 people found this helpful

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Very much of its period, with ideas that are dated


There was a time when Colin Wilson was a must read for any aficionado of science fiction, he also wrote about criminology and the breaking of taboos, there is even a movie a very b movie named Lifeforce based on Space Vampires, the book was better even if the name was terrible.

Mind Parasites suffers of with the same affliction, a terrible name with an interesting story that is very much written in the style of H. P. Lovecraft this being the reason that it is still a good story, the philosophy is very dated it talks of racial memory and the sea of shared consciousness, and the infinite expanse of the human mind, some are influences of the racial ideas left by the fascist and communist of the period and some are the experimentation with drugs the sixties had fallen for, LSD was culpable of the expanded filling of very limited consciousness, and the belief that folding the mind into colorful patterns was like folding space and time just because it felt that way. Culture and race were very much interchangeable at that time so culture was described as race, there is one disparaging comment about race in the book, but it feels glaringly notorious to a person of my period and I am not a PC person by any stretch of the imagination.

The plot is well constructed but the amount of suppositions and speculation makes it impossible to maintain coherence, we are thrown from one theory to another, from one speculation to the next and all have the same value as truth as next or the next, making the narration feverish with information and possibilities but not grounded on any one idea just constant speculation.

Interesting to revisit but dated in so many ways.


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9 people found this helpful