Jerry Hicks and Esther Hicks – Ask And It Is Given

Created on Sunday, 29 March 2009 10:56

I'll be honest, I don't know what to think of the claim that Esther Hicks is channeling non-physical entities. I initially resisted buying this book because I am cautious around such claims of supernatural inspiration. But I respect Wayne Dyer and other great thinkers who praised this book, so I decided to give it a try. I'm glad that I did.

This is one of the most powerful books on manifesting your dreams that I've ever read. Every paragraph contains deep truths that just feel intuitively right. This book is especially effective in showing how our emotions are the key to understanding whether we are on the road to success or failure in manifesting our desires. 

 

Barbara Marciniak – Bringers of the Dawn: Teachings From The Pleiadians

Created on Sunday, 29 March 2009 10:51

I first read this book five years ago and was totally captivated by it. I had never been exposed to information from channeled sources, so there was an element of newness for me along with the quality of the content. I recommend this book, but also recommend that you take from it only the parts that your life and heart tell you are for you. Leave the rest.

 

Friedrich Nietzsche – Thus Spake Zarathustra

Created on Sunday, 29 March 2009 10:35

A treatise by Friedrich Nietzsche, written in four parts and published in German between 1883 and 1885 as "Also Sprach Zarathustra". The work is incomplete, but it is the first thorough statement of Nietzsche's mature philosophy and the masterpiece of his career. It received little attention during his lifetime but its influence since his death has been considerable, in the arts as well as philosophy.

Written in the form of a prose narrative, Thus Spake Zarathustra offers the philosophy of its author through the voice of Zarathustra (based on the Persian prophet Zoroaster) who, after years of meditation, has come down from a mountain to offer his wisdom to the world. It is this work in which Nietzsche made his famous (and much misconstrued) statement that "God is dead" and in which he presented some of the most influential and well-known (and likewise misunderstood) ideas of his philosophy, including those of the Ubermensch ("overman" or "superman") and the "will to power."

Nietzsche's vision of the "Superman" (der Ubermensch) is at the center of this book, and Nietzsche gives a perfect description of his vision and what it will incorporate and help to abolish. It soon becomes clear that Nietzsche's Superman would be mentally strong rather than purely physically.

The amount of metaphors that Nietzsche uses is immense and he beautifully illustrates all his main points without a single drawing. This is a brilliant masterpiece and whether or not you agree with every point that Nietzsche makes (and few do), you will still be able to appreciate the beautiful poetry. And still, however much you may disagree, this book is thought-provoking and may turn your entire world upside down.

 

Neale Donald Walsch – Conversations with God : An Uncommon Dialogue – Book 1

Created on Friday, 27 March 2009 20:36

Blasphemy! Heresy! Who does this man think he is, claiming to speak directly to God?! Jesus did it, Muhammad did it, the Jewish prophets did it, but none of their Gods had the sardonic wit or raw verve of Walsch's God. Neale Donald Walsch isn't claiming to be the Messiah of a new religion, just a frustrated man who sat down one day with a pen in his hand and some tough questions in his heart.

As he wrote his questions to God, he realized that God was answering them… directly… through Walsch's pen. The result, far from the apocalyptic predictions or cultic eccentricities you might expect, turns out to be matter-of-fact, in-your-face wisdom on how to get by in life while remaining true to yourself and your spirituality.