This crime novel based on psychology embodies a very important role of psychology, which is to reflect the psychological state of characters through some behaviors, and then portray their physiological characteristics, and then reveal people's living conditions. In many cases, psychology is usually regarded as the study of people's mental state, and psychoanalysis is also regarded as the exploration of psychological reasons. However, in this novel, Fang Mu uses psychoanalysis, combining various clues found at the scene and the background of the victim to study the motives behind the criminal's criminal behavior. After committing the crime, it is obviously imitating famous foreign cases. We can find out the criminal's personality, behavior and motivation from the details of these cases. Among them, there is also a psychological portrayal of Meng Fangui, one of the victims and Fang Mu's classmate, and even spent a lot of ink to describe his psychological change process.
However, as this novel reveals, psychological portrait is not just a portrait of people, but a kind of life. Psychological activity is a convex mirror, and all one's behavior activities will be mapped in this deformable mirror. Life is in this convex mirror, and the effect of mapping is not straight, but refracted. A subtle psychological change may be magnified to an unimaginable extent, leading to incredible results.
Take Meng Fanzhe as an example. His fear of roll call came from the growing experience of a single-parent family, influenced by his mother's fear of mice, and he was deliberately induced by Sun Pu when he was receiving psychotherapy. Starting from a seemingly simple fear of roll call, readers can see the change of Meng Fanzhe's later life behavior (keeping cats), and extend it to the inducement behind this daily behavior (overcoming the fear brought by mice) and the consequences caused by this psychological change (being induced by Sun Pu to become a murder suspect).
From the above psychological cases, we can also see that psychological analysis since Freud has not only been confined to the psychological activities of people's subconscious, ego and superego, but has evolved into a way to explore life. People's external behavior may just be an outlet for all psychological accumulation in their lives; The subtle actions in life may reflect the imprint of an event on psychological growth before this. This seal, in turn, will be reflected in a specific action at a certain moment in the future. Therefore, it can be said that all human behaviors are analyzable, traceable and even moldable.
For a long time, it has been difficult for me to give Remy an accurate positioning of his psychological crime. It is undoubtedly a typed novel. Suspense? Scared? Reasoning? Scary? Psychological crime seems to embody every element, but it is difficult to simply classify it into a certain type. Remy's own positioning of his works is: crime novels. To tell the truth, I hesitate to accept this position, because "psychological crime" is too special.
As the chief moderator of a horror literature community, I can say responsibly that I have read too many horror literature works. From the ubiquitous psychological horror of Korean and Japanese styles to the sensory stimulation of bloody fragments of European and American styles. Aesthetics will be tired, and terror will be tired. When any work is difficult to arouse my interest in reading, Remy's Psychological Crime refreshed my spirit.
I have to admit I'm scared. The whole reading process is a day and a night. Even in September, I can still feel the chill behind me. It is not some ethereal supernatural power, but a reality and cruelty that you can't imagine and accept.
In my decades of life, although it can't be said to be smooth sailing, it is still very calm. I always thought that the so-called evil would only appear in TV dramas and legal programs and would never befall me. And "Psychological Crime" made me feel an immersive' strange journey'. There is no doubt that Remy is an excellent narrator. He seems calm, but he quietly opens his other eyes while paying attention to his words. Yes, we were there, we witnessed the crime, and we even smelled the faint smell of blood in the air. More than one reader feels that watching psychological crimes is like watching a ups and downs movie. He made us close the book and felt a cold sweat on our foreheads. Probably because of Remy's special occupation, he described criminal investigation activities almost as accurately as a textbook. This makes the psychological crime, which is already very realistic, as shocking as the closing report.