含有"悬疑小说"标签的书籍

最完美的女孩(套装全2册)

《最完美的女孩》(套装全2册)

        《最完美的女孩》讲述了我,叶欣,一个窥探心理世界的女孩,一直在寻找所谓完美的存在。突然,在某一刻,我惊恐地发现:完美其实是毁灭的开始。也许,你永远都无法体会,什么才是真正的完美,而我,在一个无法反抗的阴谋里,终于嗅到了完美的味道——血腥。犯罪心理学,一个可以洞察罪恶灵魂制造终极毁灭原因的学科。让我了解了人类扭曲的灵魂和罪恶的人格;触摸到了最冰冷的尸体,看到了最鲜血淋漓的画面。人的崩溃,是因为邪恶虚幻的诱惑。谋杀计中计,藏尸方法,犯罪心里学实验,连环杀手,困兽之局,扭曲人格,多重人格分裂,深度催眠,遥控杀人,可怕的阴谋……这一切的一切,让我痛楚,让我疯狂。不过,你不是我,所以,你无法体会那种推理之后的快感:诡计是一种艺术,就像扭曲是一种智慧。在我的精神世界里,残缺是一种完美,另一个自己,就是敌人。

vol.1:未来的我

    离奇的谋杀计中计、恐怖的藏尸方法、诡异的模仿杀人模式、复杂的困兽之局、变态的心理疾病、无法想象的记忆真相、让人绝望的邪恶阴谋……所有这一切都发生在我的身边。
    于是,我看到了一个个扭曲的嗜杀者:多重人格分裂、引导型人格分裂、被害妄想症、失忆症、自闭症、轮回症、恋母情结、雕像恋、恋尸癖、易服癖……
    在我的精神世界里,残缺是一种完美,另一个自己,就是敌人。
    我,叶欣,一个窥探心理世界的女孩,一直在寻找所谓完美的存在,突然,在某一刻,我颤栗着,惊恐着,发现:完美其实是毁灭的开始。也许,你永远都无法体会,什么才是真正的完美,而我,在一个无法反抗的阴谋里,终于嗅到了完美的味道:血腥。
    犯罪心理学,一个可以洞察无数罪恶灵魂制造毁灭的终极原因的学科。它让我了解了人类扭曲的灵魂和罪恶的人格;触摸到了最冰冷的尸体,看到了最鲜血淋漓的画面。人的崩溃,是因为邪恶虚幻的诱惑。谋杀计中计,藏尸方法,犯罪心里学实验,连环杀手,困兽之局,扭曲人格,多重人格分裂,深度催眠,遥控杀人,可怕的阴谋……这一切的一切,让我痛楚,让我疯狂。不过,你不是我,所以,你无法体会那种推理之后的快感:诡计是一种艺术,就像扭曲是一种智慧。

vol.2:另一个自己

    我,叶欣,以化名“薇拉”继续存活在这个深不可测的世界中。虽然,我时常听到另一个自己的召唤,但我知道,正义与邪恶的界限,就在对那召唤诱惑的控制中。一个我是正义使者;另一个我是杀人狂魔。跨越在鲜血淋漓的心渊世界的我可能才是最完美的我。
    偏执型人格障碍、身份识别障碍、双向情感障碍、抑郁症、虚无妄想症、关系型妄想症、虚假记忆综合症、格斯特曼综合症、司汤达综合症、共感觉综合症……每一次恐怖的谋杀背后都隐藏着一种诡异的心理疾患。
    记忆重构、角色代入法、精神分析法、被害人分析法、人类邪恶的分析、群体邪恶分析、地理学的犯罪心理学、死亡与精神病学、精神病患和杀人狂魔的界限……
    每一个扑朔迷离的死亡谜团都可以用一种科学的方法去破解。在与他们的较量过程中,我明白了——诡计是一种艺术,就像扭曲是一种智慧。
    切割狂魔、食人狂魔、肢解狂魔、鬼魂杀手、情书杀手、童话杀手、旅行杀手、死神杀手、妄想杀人狂、表演杀人狂……
    装在袋子里的人肉碎片、埋在地板下的头颅、包在礼盒中的断手……这明目张胆的残害背后,我看到的是扭曲阴森的微笑,读到的是鲜血染红的情书,听到的是心惊肉跳的童话,进入的是危险至极的旅程。可恐惧,还不仅仅于此。
    在我的精神世界里,残缺是一种完美,另一个自己,就是敌人。

清明上河图密码

全图824位人物,每个人都有名有姓,佯装、埋伏在舟船车轿、酒肆楼阁中。看似太平盛世,其实杀机四伏。翻开本书,在小贩的叫卖声中,金、辽、西夏、高丽等国的间谍、刺客已经潜伏入画,824个人物逐一复活,只待客船穿过虹桥,就一起拉开北宋帝国覆灭的序幕。 《清明上河图》描绘人物824位,牲畜60多匹,木船20多只……5米多长的画卷,画尽了汴河上下十里繁华,乃至整个北宋近两百年的文明与富饶。 然而,这幅歌颂太平盛世的传世名画,画完不久金兵就大举入侵,杀人焚城,汴京城内大火三日不熄,北宋繁华一夕扫尽。 这是北宋帝国的盛世绝影,在小贩的叫卖声中,金、辽、西夏、高丽等国的间谍和刺客已经潜伏入画,死亡的气息弥漫在汴河的波光云影中: 画面正中央,舟楫相连的汴河上,一艘看似普通的客船正要穿过虹桥,而由于来不及降下桅杆,船似乎就要撞上虹桥,船上手忙脚乱,岸边大呼小叫,一片混乱之中,贼影闪过,一阵烟雾袭来,待到烟雾散去,客船上竟出现了二十四具尸体,所有人都目瞪口呆…… 翻开本书,一幅旷世奇局徐徐展开,错综复杂,丝丝入扣,824个人物逐一复活,为你讲述《清明上河图》中埋藏的帝国秘密。 编辑推荐: 表面上看,《清明上河图》一派繁荣景象;然而,图成之时,北宋帝国的政治局势已紧张到极点。金、辽、西夏、高丽四国掣肘,方腊内乱,国势岌岌可危。《清明上河图》中隐藏着宋徽宗布下的千古奇局,祥和之中风雨欲来,贩夫走卒之间,埋伏着决定历史走向的大人物,一股诡异沉重的气氛,弥漫在汴河上下;或许只有宋徽宗知道,一场席卷帝国的腥风血雨,已在全图正中的虹桥下荡起涟漪。

古董局中局

这是一部关于古董鉴定、收藏、造假、设局的百科全书式小说。 字画、青铜、金石、瓷器…… 每一件古董背后,都是深厚的历史积淀和文化传承; 而每一件仿冒品背后,都是机关算尽的机巧和匪夷所思的圈套。 古董造假、字画仿冒,古已有之。东晋时,康昕仿冒王羲之的书法真迹,连他儿子王献之也辨认不出来;宋朝皇帝宋徽宗喜欢造假,仿制了一大批商代的青铜兵器,摆在宫廷里,乐此不疲。 在古董斑驳的纹理中,承载着一个民族的文化,一个时代的风貌,它的价值,不是金钱可以衡量的,但可怜的人类却只会用金钱去衡量它。 而本来一文不值的东西,精心涂抹一番,就可以价值连城;巨大的利益,令无数人铤而走险,更有一些家族,父传子,子传孙,世世代代在这个晦暗不明、凶险万状的江湖上营生。 许愿就是这样一个家族的传人,北京城琉璃厂一家古董店的店主,30岁,平时靠家传的半本鉴宝书混饭吃,青铜玉器、字画金石,一眼就断得出真伪,说得出渊源传承,靠这点儿绝活,过着平静而滋润的日子。 但有一天,一个突然到来的访客,把他带进了一个做梦都想不到的阴谋中,一件坊间传说的稀世珍宝,竟然和自己有着千丝万缕的联系,一个几十年前做的局,竟然已经编排进自己的命运。许愿将使出浑身解数,置身生死之间,和蛰伏了几十年的各方神圣斗智斗勇,和古董江湖里造假做局的各种奇技淫巧一一遭遇…… 翻开本书,了解古董行当里的文化传承与江湖险恶。

古董局中局

这是一部关于古董鉴定、收藏、造假、设局的百科全书式小说。 字画、青铜、金石、瓷器…… 每一件古董背后,都是深厚的历史积淀和文化传承; 而每一件仿冒品背后,都是机关算尽的机巧和匪夷所思的圈套。 古董造假、字画仿冒,古已有之。东晋时,康昕仿冒王羲之的书法真迹,连他儿子王献之也辨认不出来;宋朝皇帝宋徽宗喜欢造假,仿制了一大批商代的青铜兵器,摆在宫廷里,乐此不疲。 在古董斑驳的纹理中,承载着一个民族的文化,一个时代的风貌,它的价值,不是金钱可以衡量的,但可怜的人类却只会用金钱去衡量它。 而本来一文不值的东西,精心涂抹一番,就可以价值连城;巨大的利益,令无数人铤而走险,更有一些家族,父传子,子传孙,世世代代在这个晦暗不明、凶险万状的江湖上营生。 许愿就是这样一个家族的传人,北京城琉璃厂一家古董店的店主,30岁,平时靠家传的半本鉴宝书混饭吃,青铜玉器、字画金石,一眼就断得出真伪,说得出渊源传承,靠这点儿绝活,过着平静而滋润的日子。 但有一天,一个突然到来的访客,把他带进了一个做梦都想不到的阴谋中,一件坊间传说的稀世珍宝,竟然和自己有着千丝万缕的联系,一个几十年前做的局,竟然已经编排进自己的命运。许愿将使出浑身解数,置身生死之间,和蛰伏了几十年的各方神圣斗智斗勇,和古董江湖里造假做局的各种奇技淫巧一一遭遇…… 翻开本书,了解古董行当里的文化传承与江湖险恶。

Deception Point

Amazon.com Penzler Pick, December 2001: In the world of page-turning thrillers, Dan Brown holds a special place in the hearts of many of us. After his first book, Digital Fortress, almost passed me by, he wrote Angels and Demons, which was probably one of the half-dozen most exciting thrillers of last year. It is a pleasure to report that his new book lives up to his reputation as a writer whose research and talent make his stories exciting, believable, and just plain unputdownable. The time is now and President Zachary Herney is facing a very tough reelection. His opponent, Senator Sedgwick Sexton, is a powerful man with powerful friends and a mission: to reduce NASA's spending and move space exploration into the private sector. He has numerous supporters, including many beyond the businesses who will profit from this because of the embarrassment of 1996, when the Clinton administration was informed by NASA that proof existed of life on other planets. That information turned out to be premature, if not incorrect. (This story is true; I repeat, Dan Brown's research is very, very good.) The embattled president is assured that a rare object buried deep in the Arctic ice will prove to have far-reaching implications on America's space program. The find, however, needs to be verified. Enter Rachel Sexton, a gister for the National Reconnaissance Office. Gisters reduce complex reports into single-page briefs, and in this case the president needs that confirmation before he broadcasts to the nation, probably ensuring his reelection. It's tricky because Rachel is the daughter of his opponent. Rachel is thrilled to be on the team traveling to the Arctic circle. She is a realist about her father's politics and has little respect for his stand on NASA, but Senator Sexton cannot help but have a problem with her involvement. Adventure, romance, murder, skullduggery, and nail-biting tension ensue. By the end of Deception Point, the reader will be much better informed about how our space program works and how our politicians react to new information. Bring on the next Dan Brown thriller!                           --Otto Penzler From Publishers Weekly Struggling to rebound from a series of embarrassing blunders that have jeopardized its political life at the start of this lively thriller, NASA makes an astounding discovery: there is a meteor embedded deep within the arctic ice. And it isn't just any meteor. Inside the huge rock, which crashed to earth in 1716, are fossils of giant insects proof of extraterrestrial life. Yet, given NASA's slipping reputation, the question arises: Is the meteor real or a fake? That uncertainty dogs NASA and its supporters in Brown's latest page-flipper, a finely polished amalgam of action and intrigue. Trying to determine the truth are intelligence agent Rachel Sexton and popular oceanographer Michael Tolland, both among the first to suspect something is amiss when the meteor is pulled from the ice. Their doubts quickly make them the targets of a mysterious death squad controlled by someone or something that doesn't want the public to hear the meteor may be a fraud. Together, Sexton and Tolland scramble across arctic glaciers, take refuge on ice floes, are rescued by a nuclear submarine, then find themselves trapped aboard a small research vessel off the coast of New Jersey. All the while, the nation's capital is buzzing as to whether NASA has engaged in deception. Or is NASA just a dupe for aerospace companies that have long wanted a bigger share of space contracts? Brown (Angels & Demons) moves into new territory with his latest. It's an excellent thriller a big yet believable story unfolding at breakneck pace, with convincing settings and just the right blend of likable and hateful characters. He's also done his research, folding in sophisticated scientific and military details that make his plot far more fulfilling than the norm. From Booklist The phrase mixed bag was probably invented to describe novels like this one. It has characters that range from inventive to wooden, dialogue that bounces between evocative and cliched, a narrative structure that is sometimes serpentine and sometimes childishly simple, and a plot that lies somewhere between bold and ridiculous. While most readers will accept the author's premise--that a remarkable discovery in the Arctic may offer proof of extraterrestrial life--others may have trouble with his casting of NASA as a murderous villain. Still, this is pretty exciting stuff (Can an intelligence agent and a scholar blow the lid off a massive conspiracy before they are assassinated?), and Brown certainly does have a knack for spinning a suspenseful yarn. On the other hand, his writing style is merely adequate. In the end, what does Brown's mixed bag add up to? Those who require only that thrillers deliver the requisite number of chills will have a good time here, but those looking for a little artistry, a little panache, are likely to be disappointed.                              David Pitt From Library Journal Brown's dazzling high-tech adventure opens with NASA personnel making a startling discovery. An ancient meteorite is found buried within an Arctic glacier. Samples taken from this meteorite reveal that it contains fossils from life forms not previously seen on Earth. Could this discovery prove that we are not alone in the universe? To answer that question, several civilian scientists are dispatched to the site in order to investigate the origin of the fossils and verify NASA's findings. Before any official announcement can be made, however, one of the scientists dies under mysterious circumstances. The remaining scientists quickly realize that all is not what it appears to be as they struggle to separate truth from deceit. With this latest story, Brown (Digital Fortress) proves once again that he is among the most intelligent and dynamic of authors in the thriller genre. He has skillfully blended his own wit and style with the rip-roaring adventure of Cussler and the modern technology of Clancy. Highly recommended for all public libraries.                          Jeff Ayers, Seattle P.L.