Die Therapie 〈PLUS ⟶〉
As the wind roared, Viktor realize the therapy was never meant to heal Anna. It was his final, dangerous attempt to face the truth—or lose his mind trying to find it.
This story reflects the intense, claustrophobic atmosphere of Fitzek's bestseller, which you can explore further via its Amazon UK listing or in the TV series adaptation on Prime Video. (e.g., Anna)?
Viktor’s heart stopped. She wasn't a stranger. She was a nightmare. Die Therapie
"I need therapy, Dr. Larenz," she said, her voice shaking. "I write stories, and then they happen. And right now, I am writing about a girl. A little girl named Josy who is very sick and disappears. I’m writing her death."
Viktor Larenz hadn't heard a human voice in twelve days. He was sitting in the cabin on the island of Helgoland, the wind howling around the lonely cliffs, trying to forget that four years ago today, his twelve-year-old daughter, Josy, had vanished into thin air without a trace—no body, no witnesses, no clue. As the wind roared, Viktor realize the therapy
The sessions were a psychological battleground. Was Anna an clairvoyant? A murderer? Or, as the lines between reality and delusion blurred, was she a hallucination born of his own shattered psyche?
When the knocking came, he thought it was his guilt taking shape. But it was her. Anna Glass. She was beautiful, pale, and carrying a manuscript, claiming she was a novelist plagued by hallucinations. She was a nightmare
Die Therapie began not in an office, but in this isolated prison of a cabin. Each session with Anna was a violent excavation of his past. She told him things no one could know—the color of Josy's favorite teddy bear, the strange illness the doctors couldn't diagnose.
One Comment
Zaman Kamry
Thank you so much for this information. I’m from Melbourne, Australia, and we love our coffee/brunch/cafe culture, so when travelling we’re always looking for places to try. Thanks again for the list.