Alternative Culture MagazineCougar WebWorks Celebrating Nature, Culture, and Spirit
Alternative Culture Magazine

book reviews: new releases

e-book review Let Today Be a Holiday: 365 Ways to Co-Create with God

e-book review The Golden Thread of Time: A Voyage of Discovery into the Lost Knowledge of the Ancients

e-book review Aquarius Now: Radical Common Sense and Reclaiming our Personal Sovereignty--Marilyn Ferguson

e-book review 10 Books that Teach Compassion for Animals

e-book review Cancer: A Personal Challenge

e-book review Three New Self-Help Books

e-book review Love is Not a Game (But You Should Know the Odds)

e-book review Dream Maker--Grigor Fedan

e-book review The Spiritual Life of Animals and Plants--Laurie Conrad

e-book review There Must Be More Than This: Finding More Life, Love, and Meaning by Overcoming Your Soft Addictions - by Judith Wright

e-book review Unlocking Alien Closets: Abductions, Mind Control, and Spirituality--Leah A. Haley

e-book review Carl Melcher Goes to Vietnam--Paul Clayton

e-book review The Shamanic Drum: A Guide to Sacred Drumming--Michael Drake

e-book review Eternal Treblinka: Our treatment of Animals and the Holocaust--Charles Patterson

e-book review Unidentified Flying Objects: Starcraft--Der Voron

e-book review Looking for the Summer--Robert W. Norris

e-book review Gem's Story: The Spiritual Journey Of A Shy Girl And A Perfect Monk --Joost Boekhoven

e-book review Enlightenment in Our Time: The Perennial Wisdom in the New Millennium--Lonny J. Brown, Ph.D.

e-book review Conjuring Maud--Philip Danze

e-book review Mother of All--Richard Schiffman


Let Today Be a Holiday: 365 Ways to Co-Create with God--Rose Rosetree

This is the vanilla ice cream of self-help books.  The style and content matches the promotion and distribution of the books, as Rosetree seeks a market in the general population.  That said, it’s always good to be able to bring spiritual messages to people who need them, and to make those messages accessible.  Rose Rosetree, who also does “face readings” of people’s auras from their photographs, is well tapped into mainstream consciousness, and serves as a capable medium through which to bring spiritual angles into everyday life.  Each page provides another such angle for a day, as she fills the year with simple advices, poems, guidance, queries, and steps to self-improvement.

The Golden Thread of Time: A Voyage of Discovery into the Lost Knowledge of the Ancients--Chrichton E.M. Miller

As a layman entering into the realms of archaeological politics and radical revisions of history, Chrichton Miller has opened himself up to many challenges.  In this book he sets out to defend his theory that the ancients knew more than is commonly believed about astronomy, navigation, and architectural design, and about the links between these arts.  In fact he claims to have found the missing link in the Great Pyramid, a simple cross and plumb line providing the technological means to accomplish astonishing feats which heretofore have been unexplained by conventional history.  If the scholarship is uneven and conclusions larded with conjectures, at least this is a fascinating read which should put to rest many key assumptions about the ancient world--for instance, the notion that they believed the earth was flat.

Aquarius Now: Radical Common Sense and Reclaiming our Personal Sovereignty--Marilyn Ferguson

Yes, it’s been a full quarter-century since Ferguson’s groundbreaking book The Aquarian Conspiracy, and here she attempts to update the cultural currents that make up the great paradigm shift we’ve all been waiting for (and, come to think of it, participating in). The trouble is, there’s not much meat in this new meal; but rather a lot of pudding, or padding, or more precisely, a succession of glib one-liners lifted helter-skelter from other readings and tossed willy-nilly into this new-age salad.  The topics and subtopics and catchwords (“metastrategies”) are all very heady and trendy, even profound and you might say necessary; but somehow for this reader, they are already familiar, or at least tamely presented.  Is it because some of us have been doing the work for twenty-five or more years?  Or is there a relative irrelevance to all of this theory and concept, when too many still haven’t bought into the need for a new paradigm in the first place?  For this reviewer the lack of substance comes down to the bibliographic style of the writing itself. When every brief paragraph, every disconnected sentence is merely a quote or paraphrase from another writer, there is not enough original cement between them all to hold it together.  The back cover is full of praise for the book from the usual array of notable PhDs and authors, so there must be some appeal, either to those more in the know than I, or perhaps to those more in need of a crash refresher course in popular/intellectual “alternative culture.”  If you are in one of those camps this may just be the book for you.

Cancer: A Personal Challenge--ed. Bob Rich, PhD
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1877053112/cougarwebworks

Bob Rich has assembled a comprehensive and readable collection of personal stories and informative articles that should guide anyone in becoming acquainted with cancer and its conventional and alternative therapies. The book is well balanced in its approach: no-nonsense scientific descriptions of the medical conditions; heartfelt narratives of personal journeys with disease (involving acceptance, recovery and support); and insightful portrayals of alternative healing methods. Chief among these are various forms of meditation and visualization, with proven effects in reducing the threat or impact of cancer. All in all this book is a powerful testament to the power of mind over body, convincing both scientifically and spiritually.


Dream Maker--Grigor Fedan
http://www.grigorfedan.com

Dream Maker begins with a chronically depressed man, Martin Devon, struggling with a failing marriage and a collapsing business. At his bleakest hour he is helped during his sleep. He finds himself revisiting a past life, Britain 464 AD and encounters mystics who practice meditation and Agape, practices that were to be eradicated in a few more centuries. The Arthurian legend also figures prominently, and the book provides a good factual account of the time period. In the course of events Martin discovers the cause of his condition, but also the means to heal himself. It's a fun, good read with substance.


The Spiritual Life of Animals and Plants--Laurie Conrad
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0759658722/cougarwebworks

Clairvoyant, music teacher and psychic healer Laurie Conrad has written a charming and engaging book about her often miraculous experiences of prayer and healing with her numerous cats, dogs, and other fauna and flora. The book is disarmingly simple, almost naive...yet powerful and believable, as we read about how the animals respond to (and sometimes help compose!) classical music, pictures and statues of holy figures, and directed prayer.


Unlocking Alien Closets: Abductions, Mind Control, and Spirituality--Leah A. Haley
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1883729084/cougarwebworks

If you're already a believer and want to be entertained with a continual stream of abduction fantasies--er, experiences--then this is the book for you. But beware; They might be onto you then. Usually I'm pretty open-minded about these things, but when the abductions happen daily (nightly) and take every form seen in the literature, it gets to be a bit much. To her credit, Leah Haley is educated, articulate, and passionate about the personal growth lessons implicit in her long history of contact with "a whirlwind of dark mysteries"...which include media mistreatment and shadowy government coverups. Ultimately it comes down to a judgment call about what is real; a leap of faith. This is the choice for "unwitting victims" like Leah, as it is for the reader.


Carl Melcher Goes to Vietnam--Paul Clayton
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1591133009/cougarwebworks

This slim novel (196 pages) came out of nowhere (ebookland) to become a finalist at the 2001 Frankfurt eBook Awards, alongside such a notable as Joyce Carol Oates. Its style is plain and unassuming; its content likewise confined to the daily experiences of the mundane foot soldier in Vietnam.

Yet this book has a certain naïve charm that grows on the reader, at the same time as the narrator experiences the growing horror of the doomed ground war from close up. Neither the beginning nor the end of the story, framing a year's tour of active duty, are earthshaking. Yet in the reading of it we have a compelling portrait of a real and likeable person undergoing the life-and-death charade that is war.


The Shamanic Drum: A Guide to Sacred Drumming--Michael Drake
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1591131642/cougarwebworks

This book is a valuable, well-researched, and well-written treatment of all aspects of shamanic drumming. The author weaves together both ancient and modern lore, from oral shamanic chants to modern physics and biology, along with personal experiences to illuminate the practice of sacred drumming.

He draws most heavily from the Native American shamanic tradition, which uses the frame drum, but also covers similar traditions from other primal cultures around the world.

I didn't find much in this book that I hadn't come across elsewhere; yet perhaps nowhere else have I seen such a wealth of information and insight specific to the use of the sacred drum for contemporary shamanic and healing uses.

Included are step-by-step exercises, analysis of different beats and tempos, and chapters on cosmology, journeying, power practice, and healing the earth. Recommended to anyone seeking to connect deeply with the drum as a tool for personal, interpersonal, or group spiritual and healing work.


Unidentified Flying Objects: Starcraft--Der Voron
http://www.publishamerica.com

Starcraft has a lot of interesting material thrown together: this sums up my reaction to the book. Aimed at "UFO beginners," thought-provoking questions are raised and intriguing evidence is presented (from an array of sources of inconsistent reliability) for the long-term presence of alien intelligent life on earth. Unfortunately, the material is unprofessionally written and poorly organized. There is no central principle or conclusion, except that we are not--and have not been for a very long time--alone.

Some of most captivating evidence concerns areas showing apparent ancient nuclear blast damage, in a number of archaeological sites from Scotland to the Sahara. Other chapters (in no particular order in the book) cover UFO sightings and crashes, extraterrestrial technology (the most poorly documented), biological/genetic engineering of humans, and secret US government research on alien starcraft.

If you are not already convinced of the existence of starcraft on earth, this book is unlikely to do it for you. But it might open your eyes to some startling "facts" to ponder.


Looking for the Summer--Robert W. Norris
http://www2.gol.com/users/norris/

Bob Norris tells a riveting true-to-life story of the Vietnam era and its aftermath. A young man has a high draft number, joins the Air Force, and then serves a year in military prison rather than going to war. This archetypal predicament serves as background for the adventures related here, beginning in Paris and extending to Germany, Afghanistan and India. David Thompson has left the U.S. and is seeking a broader vision, finding in the world around him and within himself the inspiration to write. Along the way he finds friendship and support by a number of other interesting characters, who accompany him in a journey of discovery. Physical danger and political intrigue are part of the bargain, but these he survives until the final revelations he receives in the squalor of India. Finally he is able to come to terms with his own private demons, his estranged father, his homeland, the past.

The book is entertaining, fast-paced, and well-written. The language is fresh and smooth, the characters are alive, the scenery vivid. We are able to identify with Mr. Thompson (presumably Norris) through his struggles to find meaning and peace in his self-exile. Mr. Norris has given us an apt and representative portrait of a generation.

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Gem's Story: The Spiritual Journey Of A Shy Girl And A Perfect Monk --Joost Boekhoven
http://www.gemstories.com

I particularly enjoyed having this ebook along, efficiently packed inside a 12-oz mini-computer, during a recent walking journey through Spain and Portugal. The journey of an unusual young girl in the company of a wandering monk was evocative of some of the same truths my partner and I were discovering. The simple style made for refreshing and easy reading, and also was good for reading aloud. Yet reading aloud raised the question of how different the two main characters' voices are--not very. They seem in fact to become more similar as the story progresses; but perhaps this is intentional, as the connection between the characters increases.

The text reads like journal entries...yet its place in the action is more like interior thought...yet dialogue and conventional narration is included, too. Somehow it all works, anyway, as the central theme is certainly gripping and allows the story to carry our interest despite stylistic questions or minor flaws. The overall effect is of a cartoon or comic-book type presentation: a fable, a parable, a fairy-tale, using simple word pictures and captions to carry the story forward. The stark lack of detail in physical and cultural setting is not necessarily a fault, as prominence is thereby given to the narrative device of the two alternating voice-tracks.

The ending seemed to me too abrupt, summarized. The revelations and spiritual lessons in the second half weren't new, though at times they were presented as if they were. And after following both characters through their learning about the oneness of God's all-present manifestation, I found the monastic conclusion rather sterile. Still, it's a captivating love story with unusual spiritual depths, and I would recommend it to anyone looking to explore the ways in which love and wisdom might conspire.

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Enlightenment in Our Time: The Perennial Wisdom in the New Millennium--Lonny J. Brown, Ph.D.
http://www.BookLocker.com/bookpages/lonnybrown01.html
http://www.holistic.com/lonny

This is a book I personally had trouble reading; but it might be just the right book for another spiritual seeker. My problem was that I found nothing new in it. I had already been exposed to the ideas and philosophies and wisdom teachings so thoroughly described and collected here. Truly, however, Mr. Brown has done a remarkable job in bringing under one roof the many teachings, practices, questions, and insights that any quest for wisdom must encounter.

In the matter of style I was also disappointed, finding quotes and second-hand knowledge substituting for original thinking. By contrast I think in this regard of a truly fresh and original treatment of spiritual awakening, Satyam Nadeen's From Onions to Pearls: A Journey of Awakening and Deliverance; another is Eckhard Tolle's The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment.

In my opinion, the shining jewel in this volume is a guided visualization through the path of the seven chakras. I found Dr. Brown's elucidation of these energy centers comprehensive and vivid.

In conclusion, I would definitely recommend Dr. Brown's compendium to anyone coming relatively new upon the landscape of alternative spirituality. For more seasoned inner travelers, however, I would recommend looking elsewhere for a stimulating read.

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Conjuring Maud--Philip Danze

Philip Danze's first novel is a dazzling descent into a heart of darkness, while also an enchanting tale of an unusual romance. The vivid imagery and taut narrative carried my interest solidly to the end. Danze gives us a simple yet unique love story in an unforgettable setting in equatorial West Africa in the early part of the twentieth century. A recommended read--scheduled for print release in October 2001 by GreyCore Press.


Mother of All--Richard Schiffman

Richard Schiffman has written an entertaining and illuminating portrait of one of India's lesser known saints: a woman who earned by her exemplary spiritual depth the name, "Mother of All." A humble housewife in the tiny village of Jillellamudi, "Mother" ministers to all and sundry with the same self-effacing yet all-powerful message of simplicity, identifying with, and manifesting without effort, the undiscriminating grace of the mothering cosmos.

Schiffman writes both from his first-hand experience with the Mother and, in top-notch story-telling style, of Mother's early years on her somewhat miraculous path to public fame. His elucidations of the Mother's message of wholeness are at times repetitive and lengthy, but always well-articulated and clear. The book concludes with the memorable sayings of the Mother herself, who passed from her earthly sojourn in 1985.

 

 


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