A brilliant young psychiatrist searches for the woman who is largely responsible for much of his practice by having broken the hearts of so many of his patients
Type:
Feature
Status:
For sale
Page Count:
102pp
Genre:
Comedy, Romance
Budget:
Independent
Age Rating:
Everyone
Synopsis/Details
When a group of young men come to see the young, brilliant, aloof psychiatrist Dr. Marcus Hatcher for group therapy to deal with the pain of romantic loss, Marcus confidently assures them that the emotional difficulties they’re all having at their breakup with women is not unusual. That is until they explain it’s not women, but woman; they’ve all lost the same woman, Lydia, The Most Wonderful Woman In The World. Though each one dated her at a different time, Marcus says they’re all suffering from mass hysteria, but he’s quite certain that through therapy he can help them overcome their problem. One evening, several weeks later, a bored Marcus decides to see, just see, the object of his patients’ obsession. He not only sees Lydia, he speaks to her, and realizes that she is The Most Wonderful Woman In The World. Marcus instantly falls madly in love with her, and finds himself involved in some-thing he has never experienced before, a deeply emotional, all consuming love affair with a fantastic woman. Marcus, of course, can’t tell Lydia who he really is, or what he does, nor can he tell the men he’s treating for obsession, that he has fallen in love with their obsession. The brilliant, young psychiatrist finds himself overwhelmed by love, and terrified that all his lies will come crashing down around him.

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Jim Boston's picture

The Writer: M. E. Lee

I've been writing for a (relatively) long time. It's what I do. I don't act, I don't sing, I don't dance, I don't direct. I write. And if I am able to live the rest of my life writing I will be happy. If on top of that I can make a living by writing, I will be even happier...or so I believe...sincerely hope... I'm a strong believer in what Shakespeare wrote, "What's past is prologue." My schooling, my family, my jobs, my history in The Industry, that's all just prologue. What I write now is what counts. That's my bio. I wrote it. Go to bio
M. E. Lee's picture