Product Description
In The Windwalkers, a psychologist battles her inner demons to find the strength she needs to eliminate a new form of dependency that has permeated every facet of society. It is an intriguing blend of satisfying story line and a serious social consciousness that weaves together the quirky possibilities of a Dean Koontz novel with a feminine sensitivity.
The story begins when Psychologist Liz Starling and Jack Thompson, ad agency executive, form a partnership to create an educational advertising campaign for Mental Health Awareness Month. During the course of their work, their focus turns to windwalkers, the temporary physical beings created psychically by people’s needs and wants. Their existence is destroying any sense of personal responsibility and eliminating the need for genuine human interaction. The nightmare of a society driven by individual desire seems destined to become a reality. A strong proponent of this way of life is Psychiatrist Tennyson Pickett, Liz’s supervisor and chief antagonist. All that stands in the way of this ugly inevitability are Liz, Jack, and Cherisse Scatliffe, an ancient woman sequestered in the wilds of the Virgin Islands. The provocative questions raised about human nature are certain to generate introspection and conversation.
About the Author
Diane Fanning's next book, Through the Window(St. Martin's Press True Crime Library), is coming out in April 2003. It is the true story of the crimes of serial killer Tommy Lynn Sells. She is now researching her second true crime book for the same publisher. In addition to writing, she is the Executive Director of Another Way Texas Shares, a non-profit statewide federation. The Governor has recently appointed her to her third term on the State Advisory Committee for the State Employee Charitable Campaign. She also serves as Secretary on the Executive Committee of the National Alliance for Choice and Giving (NACG), and is a member of the Writer's League of Texas, the National Writers Union and the Heart of Texas Chapter of Sisters in Crime. She is the recipient of the 2001 NACG Freedom Fighter Award.