Мислите в главите by Harry Stojan
Harry Stojan's Мислите в главите (Thoughts in the Heads) is one of those quiet, brain-bending novels that sneaks up on you. It doesn't rely on flashy action or a complex world. Instead, it turns the most intimate space we know—our own mind—into a thrilling and deeply unsettling landscape.
The Story
The story follows Leo, an ordinary man with an ordinary life. One Tuesday, everything changes. He's making coffee when a sudden, vivid memory of a childhood birthday party—a party he never had—floods his mind. This is the first intrusion. Soon, it's not just memories. It's opinions, fears, desires, and a constant internal monologue that isn't his. Leo is now sharing his headspace with the consciousness of a man named Viktor. He experiences Viktor's grief over a lost love, his anxiety about work, his secret joys. As Leo struggles to maintain his own identity and relationships, he becomes obsessed with finding the real Viktor. His search becomes a journey into the nature of self, connection, and the walls we think separate us from other people.
Why You Should Read It
What makes this book special is how personal it feels. Stojan writes about this impossible situation with such emotional honesty. You feel Leo's confusion, his desperation to cling to 'Leo,' and his strange, growing empathy for the stranger in his head. It's less a sci-fi thriller and more a profound look at empathy. What if you were forced to truly, completely understand someone else's pain and joy? Could you still hold onto who you are? The relationship between Leo and the 'voice' of Viktor is strangely beautiful and tense. It made me think about my own internal voice and how much of it is truly, uniquely mine.
Final Verdict
This book is perfect for anyone who loves character-driven stories that explore big ideas without being pretentious. If you enjoyed the psychological depth of authors like Kazuo Ishiguro or the existential puzzles in films like 'Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,' you'll find a lot to love here. It's a thinker's page-turner—a book that's easy to read but hard to forget. You'll finish the last page and immediately look at your own thoughts a little differently.
This book is widely considered to be in the public domain. Enjoy reading and sharing without restrictions.
Oliver Lewis
6 months agoPerfect.