Synopsis of the Novel The Visualizer’s Terrifying Dreams
It’s better to mistake a scoundrel for a saint a thousand times than once take a saint for a scoundrel.
Siddhartha Gautama (Buddha)
The Visualizer’s Terrifying Dreams is the sequel to Nikita T.’s cult novel The Visualizer, or The Man Who Alters Reality.
In this new book, readers will meet familiar heroes who must face new trials and confront the problems society poses, this time, while living abroad.
Whereas the first novel’s events essentially took place in Russia, this second installment unfolds mainly in the United States, where the protagonists escape after being confined in the psychiatric clinic of I. M. Rabinovich.
Once again, they find themselves battling the forces of evil, but now those forces take a different form. No longer deranged psychiatrists, their adversaries are powerful oligarchs representing a Masonic order. These men belong to a secret society disguised as an exclusive golf club, whose members include some of America’s wealthiest Jewish financiers and bankers, pillars of the U.S. financial elite, as well as corrupt government officials.
Obsessed with preserving their fading prosperity, they scheme to shrink the world’s population, blind to the truth that happiness cannot coexist with endless wars and global epidemics. They continue their revelry as if still young, unaware that the age of the “golden billion,” the era of mass consumption, is dying, and the collapse of their imperfect society draws near.
To stop the criminal designs of this secret cabal of financial magnates and multinational executives, the novel’s heroes create a global platform to publish exposes of their activities. They stand for free speech in the West, especially in America, and for the truth that powerful interests strive to conceal.
The Visualizer cycle is planned to continue with another book, tentatively titled The Return of the Visualizer, in which the protagonists leave the U.S. and return to Russia to confront the unresolved conflicts of their youth.
Amid today’s worldwide hysteria of war, these novels carry an openly antiwar message.
The first book, The Visualizer, or The Man Who Alters Reality, dealt with the dangers surrounding the creation and use of psychotronic weapons. I sought to portray the perils our generation will face if such weapons ever come to exist.
The sequel, The Visualizer’s Terrifying Dreams, explores a different but equally dire threat: a global epidemic unleashed through the reckless actions of conspirators and their accomplices, corrupt officials in the U.S. government. These forces lobby for the establishment of secret biolabs and CIA prisons across Eastern Europe, laying the groundwork for bioterrorism.