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Eyes Everywhere [Hardcover]

Matthew Warner (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 1, 2006
I See You ... They follow him home from work. They monitor his e-mails. They may even be reading his mind. I Spy ... Charlie Fields, a young father in a dead-end secretarial job in Washington, DC, has uncovered a conspiracy of historic proportions. A family friend, Philip Duke, heads a secret organization bent on controlling the world-or so it seems. Is Charlie crazy, as his wife claims? Or is Duke's "Gestapo" now stalking them? Do You See What I See? ... The neighbors beat on his walls at night, chanting his name. Spy cameras watch his every move. And now he's experiencing strange memory gaps. Time runs out as Charlie learns the Gestapo is experimenting on his small children. Worse, his wife is helping them. They're everywhere, watching him...studying him. It's time to take action-and if he has to abduct his own kids to save them, then so be it.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

While horror fiction often deals with madness as a reaction to some violation of natural law or as a metaphor for the darker parts of the human condition, Warner's disturbing third novel (after The Organ Donor and Death Sentences) takes a realistic look at a case of paranoid schizophrenia. Charlie Fields, a 30-year-old male secretary at a Washington, D.C., law firm, suffers many stresses all too common in our modern life: fear of having his job eliminated, fear of not being able to provide for his family, fear of terrorism. Warner subtly depicts the progression of Charlie's paranoia and delusions. As Charlie retreats into a world where he's in control and has power, he becomes increasingly estranged from all that he loves. Warner has created an everyman for our time, and if the result is not pleasant or escapist, it is compelling and insightful. (Aug.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Raw Dog Screaming Press (August 1, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1933293187
  • ISBN-13: 978-1933293189
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.3 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,111,397 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Matthew Warner's publishing credits span a variety of formats, including novels, short stories, screenplays, radio, and newspapers. His first horror novel in 2003, The Organ Donor, garnered a 5-star review from FeoAmante.com, which labeled the book a "straight-on modern classic of horror." As of spring 2010, his publishing credits include five books and more than 30 short stories. Dramatic works include a short film from Darkstone Entertainment / Red Army Films based on one of his screenplays as well as a radio play from the Wayne Theatre Alliance in Waynesboro, Virginia. Warner also offers up frequent audio adaptations of work by himself and others, appearing in such venues as VariantFrequencies.com.

Warner's opinion column, "Author's Notes," ran for five years at HorrorWorld.org, and consisted of a blend of commentary, autobiography, and tutorials about the writing craft. Guide Dog Books collected the first three years of those columns into its debut non-fiction title, Horror Isn't a 4-Letter Word: Essays on Writing & Appreciating the Genre.

Warner lives in Staunton, Virginia, with his wife, the artist Deena Warner, who illustrates for a variety of horror publishers. In 2007, they opened a print and web design business, Deena Warner Design LLC, whose clients include Random House, Simon & Schuster, Penguin, and the Perseus Books Group.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Insightful, terrifying portrait of schizophrenia, August 12, 2006
This review is from: Eyes Everywhere (Hardcover)
"I remember when I lost my mind ... Yeah, I was out of touch / But it wasn't because I didn't know enough / I just knew too much / Does that make me crazy? ... Probably." -- Gnarls Barkley, "Crazy"

In just his second novel, author Matthew Warner has chosen to tackle a subject that most authors would not attempt until much later in their careers: the psychological downward spiral of his protagonist. It is not an easy topic; it requires a lot of research and good amount of natural insight and empathy. Luckily, Warner has shown an affinity for both in his previous works, making him the ideal person to write it. Eyes Everywhere is easily the novel of the year, and a lot of it is due to that perfect fusion of book and author.

An offhand remark at a company meeting starts Charlie Fields, a thirty-year-old husband and father in a dead-end secretarial job, down the road that will eventually lead to his total undoing. Already in fear of being considered a candidate for "reduction in force" ("RIF. It was one letter removed from RIP."), Charlie's comment causes offense due to certain racial overtones, and at the end of the day, he notices someone is following him home -- a black man in a business suit.

Soon, Charlie comes to believe that his wife is preparing to leave him for a Mexican and eventually becomes suspicious of all darker-skinned people. Things begin to spiral out of control as Charlie sees links where there are none, perceives threats from people in high places, and attempts to translate communications given via fast-food wrappers.

Like his friend and mentor, Gary A. Braunbeck (who offers up a deft analysis of Eyes Everywhere in the Afterword), Matthew Warner does not shy away from genuine emotions -- he embraces them. His short story collection, Death Sentences: Tales of Punishment and Revenge, showcased this penchant in tales like "Middle Passage," "The Cave," and "A Second Chance." The results were uneven in those stories, but it was obvious that Warner's characters were important enough to him to make them feel real (a little too real sometimes), and that he would continue to pursue this to undoubtedly greater effect.

Psychology has been a life-long interest of mine. I even have a degree in it (as much good as that's done me). But people fascinate me and I've been a "hobbyist," so to speak, for over twenty years, always on the lookout for books or movies that delve deeply into the human psyche, specifically its abnormalities. The best of these are those that take their subjects purely at face value, letting the audience draw its own conclusions. Two perfect examples of this are classics of the cinema directed by Roman Polanski: The Tenant and Repulsion.

Matthew Warner follows this same tactic with Charlie Fields. His story is told in third person, but completely from Charlie's point of view, giving us only his perceptions, never the author's. Some authors would feel a need to intrude and make sure we know what is real and what is not, but Warner trusts his readers and their intelligence enough to let us figure it out on our own (or, in most cases, simply guess). This approach has another benefit: It leaves enough room for surprises, and in the end, makes Eyes Everywhere an interactive read, involving us more in Charlie's situation than a more distancing narrative would allow with its strict definition of reality. Neither he nor we really know what's going on (though we suspect that Charlie has mostly got it wrong), and that combination of unknown quantities ratchets the tension way up. Charlie's head, despite its imperfections, is a very exciting and suspenseful place to be.

But Eyes Everywhere will make an immediate impression before you even open the book due to the stunning cover art by Mike Bohatch. Blue, gray, and purple coexist with lightning and an obviously distressed individual to give a hint of what is between the covers without giving too much away. It's a perfect illustration, even more impressive than his cover for The Fall of Never (a book I recommend for fans of this one).

Hardcore Matthew Warner fans will want to spring the extra money for the signed limited edition (available through the publisher's website), because it includes a bonus forty-page novella and more illustrations from Bohatch. "Die Not in Vain" tells the story of Joe Merrill, who is preparing to move his Alzheimer's-stricken mother out of her home. On the flight there, he has a totally realistic vision of the plane's destruction, and soon these visions of his own death begin to take over his consciousness, leading him to realize he may be going crazy. "Die Not in Vain" is in this way related to Eyes Everywhere, and is thus an ideal companion piece, without being anything like a retread.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Tear Jerker, October 15, 2006
This review is from: Eyes Everywhere (Hardcover)
I was ticked at myself after having read the back cover before diving into the novel itself. From the excerpts, the reader knows the main character is schizophrenic right from the beginning, which took some of the fun out of the first chapter or two. But now that all is said and done, I look back on this read and nod my head in approval.

EYES EVERYWHERE follows Charlie, an employee in a prominent DC law firm, who after 9/11 gets assigned the duty of captain on the firm's evacuation team (in case of a terrorist threat). Already worried about losing his job as layoffs sweep the firm, Charlie one day makes a comment that is contrued as racist while in a business meeting. That day he is followed by a black man. Cameras are in his apartment. The Mexicans are consipiring against him. His wife is in on it...

Matthew Warner's tale about Charlie's descent into paranoid schizophrenia is brilliantly executed. The writing is very tight. Don't worry, I did not spoil anything. Forget about genres, this is just great fiction...

For a more in-depth review, see Insidious Reflections #8.
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