Synopsis

What is the greatest desire of all?
In the death choked corridors of Palermo's famous catacombs, a young man asks this question of himself as he stands surrounded by eight thousand mummified corpses. The answer he gives, will set the course of his life and take him on a journey into the heart of darkness.
Adrian Ashton is a brilliant man: a quantum physicist and chronobiologist who has devoted his life to the study of chi — the vital energy that runs through our bodies. A gifted scientist, he is also a skilled martial artist — and a hunter. Calling himself Dragonfly, he preys on fighters and martial artists who are blessed with a strong life force, draining them of their chi and making it his own. To assist him in his quest, he draws on the knowledge contained in an enigmatic Chinese text written by a legendary Chinese physician in the thirteenth century.
But the hunter becomes the hunted when a mysterious woman enters his life. A martial artist herself, she belongs to a long line of Keepers: women who are warriors, healers and protectors. When Dragonfly targets the man she loves, she sets out to defeat him. It becomes a fight to the death in which love is both the greatest weakness and the biggest prize.
A fast-paced, highly original thriller, The Keeper: A Martial Arts Thriller* blends mysticism with science and explores themes as old as time: the imperative of violence, the redemptive power of love and the greatest desire of all — to live for ever.

In Keeper of Light and Dust*, my heroine ''steps out'' and visits a mystical place called The Retreat.
This is where she comes to practice the centuries old ritual of Fa gung and recharges her own energy — chi — to pass on to her charges.
'The Retreat was bathed in moonlight. There was a satisfying sense of solidity to the thick walls and the low sweeping eaves of the roof. The slab of stone surrounding the door was etched with symbols: earth, fire, water, metal and wood — the five gogyo symbols, which the Keeper shared with practitioners of Ninjitsu.'From: Keeper of Light and Dust* by Natasha Mostert
'Stepping out' is my own term for an out-of-body experience. The sensation of leaving your body behind, travelling through a modified reality and then returning, is an old one: reports of OBEs go back thousands of years. But science only became interested in the phenomenon after Celia Green's first extensive scientific studies on the subject in 1968.
Since then, neurologists, using binaural beats to elicit theta brain wave frequencies or using sinusoidal wave pulses, have tried to induce OBE-like experiences on command. The Swiss researcher Olaf Blanke managed to elicit OBE states by stimulating the right temporal-parietal junction of the brain. But it wasn't until 2007 that Henrik Ehrsson performed the first experimental method that fitted a three-point definition of an OBE, inducing an out-of-body experience in healthy participants at the Institute of Neurology at the University College of London.
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*Title used for the US edition. UK edition is titled The Keeper.