Average customer rating:
- Smart, Sly, Sad
- Funny, cynical, uber-clever first novel
- Duffer
- Delightfully Witty and Vulgar!
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The Rachel Papers
Martin Amis
Manufacturer: Vintage
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Night Train
ASIN: 0679734589
Release Date: 1992-09-29 |
Book Description
In his uproarious first novel Martin Amis, author of the bestselling London Fields, gave us one of the most noxiously believable -- and curiously touching -- adolescents ever to sniffle and lust his way through the pages of contemporary fiction. On the brink of twenty, Charles High-way preps desultorily for Oxford, cheerfully loathes his father, and meticulously plots the seduction of a girl named Rachel -- a girl who sorely tests the mettle of his cynicism when he finds himself falling in love with her.
Customer Reviews:
Smart, Sly, Sad.......2007-07-24
The Rachel Papers is something like Nabokov meets the teen sex film, but with depth and edge; perhaps this is the novel's greatest accomplishment. It simultaneously portrays sex as the farce it can truly be, but gives equal room to the gravity of this most intimate of human activities, which reveals more than it conceals about our nature. And this can be played out nowhere more aptly than in the battleground of late teen sex: that border zone where libido meets maturity in uncertain shades of gray. Amis hits the mark here in great stride; the novel is witty and biting and laugh out loud funny; it is both a portrait and caricature of the human being as sexual animal.
Funny, cynical, uber-clever first novel.......2006-11-03
The Rachel Papers was Martin Amis's first novel, from 1973, written when he was about the age of the book's protagonist -- that is, on the cusp of 20. Charles Highway tells his story on the night before his 20th birthday, which in his view makes him an adult. He is cramming for entry to Oxford. He's the son of a successful man who he mostly loathes. He is living in London, with his elder sister and her rather disgusting husband.
The story tells in flashbacks the history of his relationship with a girl named Rachel. He meets her at a party he crashes with a friend -- it turns out she's the one throwing the party, though he has no idea of that. He is smitten, and despite the presence of an American boyfriend, he tries to get her to go out with him, and haltingly succeeds. And so the tale goes ... several months of a fairly sweet (in context) relationship between two not terribly well-matched people. Charles is ferociously cynical (if much of that is a pose) while Rachel is sweet enough, pretty, but perhaps a bit dim. They have terrific sex but that seems their main connection. There are amusing scenes with both families, and plenty of further comedic details of Charles's life, in particular his dealings with the bumbling tutors at his cramming school. He also deals with the infidelities of his father and his brother-in-law. And finally of course with his concerns about where his relationship with Rachel is headed.
It's a very fine first novel. Very funny, in what was soon enough known as Amis's standard cynical manner. (Though not nearly so overblown and vicious as for example Money.)
Duffer.......2006-04-30
The Rachel Papers, by Martin Amis, is an interesting portrayal of the teenage years of Charles Highway. As Charles nears his twentieth birthday he reflects on the memories that were recorded in his journal. Jam packed with sex and drugs, this caricature of the 60's and 70's lifestyle is quite vulgar. Martin Amis details Charles Highway's frequent sexual encounters and even dabs into the health problems that occur as a result. Mr. Highway is an intellectual, upper class, lower class; well ... I guess you could say he is whatever he wants to be. Living his life is all about technique. His movements and speech depend on the situation. Throughout the whole book Charles struggles to find out who he really is. He jumps from woman to woman staging all of his encounters trying to adapt to their personality and mannerisms. Charles is highly self conscious and feels as though he has to put on a show of the "perfect" human for people to like him. As He meets Rachel he finds that, unknowingly, he is starting to act like himself. No more written scripts for telephone calls or leaving books around his room that will make people think he is smart. His relationship with Rachel thrived more than any other relationship he had ever had. She liked him for who he was. Imperfections make somebody unique and desirable. Charles really has a hard time making the relationship work. Before Rachel, the longest relationship that he had lasted only a night in bed with another girl.
I personally think this book was quite humorous because of the desperate and quite pathetic acts of Charles Highway. To watch the amount of time he puts into arranging his room and the topics of his conversation just to get a woman in bed is amusing. The sexual scenes however are quite explicit and may be offending to some. Over the course of the book I saw Charles expand as a person. Expand beyond this fake life he has been leading. He doesn't realize it at first but he finds himself not having to plan his days like he used to. While his relationship with Rachel becomes more than sex he starts to learn something that is most important, which is how to be himself. By the end of the book it seems to some as though he didn't learn a thing because Rachel is out of the picture. To me I saw a boy who grew up and even if he failed with Rachel he indeed learned many skills to help future relationships go further than the bed.
Delightfully Witty and Vulgar!.......2006-04-28
Charles Highway: an overanalysing piece of work. He is shallow (like most men probably are, it's just reading what we think is a little harder to swallow) but still manages to charm the ladies. This book is all about the massive amounts of diaries Charles keeps each year and he is reminiscing over them in the hours leading up to the stroke of midnight declaring the end of his childhood. He has kept many diaries for a large portion of his life (he mentions that he seems to always go through seven a year no matter how he tries to cut down) but the ones he is focusing on are over the recent months about Rachel.
At first this book was a little hard to get really into, what with all the witty remarks and crude, blatant talk about women; which I am more than likely to be found guilty of. After the first chapter you begin to realise how rather pathetic Charles really is, he wears glasses, is trying to attend Oxford and thinks about getting drunk before calling a girl he likes, not to mention he has a note card with conversation topics. Once, before he was to take Rachel to a show he saw the same one the prior day to think of a funny commentary for the date. He is shallow on the outside to his friends who have a similar mindset, yet we get to see inside his genius cranium. I'm sure a lot of people have put on a different appearance to fit in with their friends and I believe this is why Charles Highway is such a likeable fellow.
Not only is Charles the epitome of the average lower-middle class man, but the story is captivating and well written, the occasional swears add the right touch without overdoing it, really giving the reader the material to create their own interpretation of how the characters look and sound. Charles has saved the papers for the eve of his twentieth birthday because, as he sees it, it is the end of childhood and the beginning of adulthood.
Charles sits down at seven o'clock and over the next four hours takes the reader from his elaborate, albeit phoney vacation in Spain to...well I wouldn't want to spoil the ending but many diaries are read and many secrets and `graphic' scenes are described in almost too much detail.
All you need to know is that should the opportunity arise, or not arise then you should read this book (if the opportunity doesn't arise you may want to stop waiting and go out and buy the book). If, however, scenes of explicit content offend you, you may want to consider something a little tamer. I'd have to rate this book an R, maybe an NC-17 for the odd swear and depiction of sexual acts so if you are under the age of 5 and don't have an adult reading with you, avoid this book. But for those of a more mature audience (not too mature mind you) if you want a book that will make you laugh and cringe, this IS for you.
Don't read this!.......2006-04-27
A Review of The Rachel Papers
If it wasn't for the sex, the drugs and the vulgarity The Rachel Papers by Martin Amis would have been completely unreadable. The fact is that is all that was appealing in the entire book. Outside of the crude and sometimes over-the-top humor, The Rachel Papers is just another book about a young adult trying to `find himself'. The young adult in question is Charles Highway, who is on the verge of turning twenty; something he thinks will have a large effect on his life. The Rachel Papers are a diary of his journey from age nine-teen to age twenty, as Charles tries to seduce a young women named Rachel. This sets the stage for Charles to make a complete ass of himself throughout the whole book. The author Martin Amis seems to pin all the stereotypes of a young adult on Charles, and he comes out with a totally unlikable character. Charles character doesn't seem to change throughout the whole book; he never learns from his mistakes and still believes that he is `the man'.
On the other hand The Rachel Papers does have some good characters, starting with Charles' love interest: Rachel. She is almost the complete opposite of Charles and is both believable and likable, and of course Charles doesn't see this. Aside from Rachel there are a few other decent characters, one being the totally unforgettable Norman, who in a weird way acts as a role model for Charles. On top of the you have Charles parents and there utterly bizarre relationship. The side characters are good but overall they can't make up for Charles.
One of the defining things of the book is its explicitness and vulgarity. The reactions of readers of the book range from hilarious to disturbing to offensive, so as you can see you will either love or hate the language and situations the language describes. For example depending on your taste, without going into too much detail, will either love or hate the part involving Scissors, a condom and an important part of the body. For anyone my age (18) you will love the humor, anyone older who is sensitive and easily offended should steer clear.
All in all, I think Amis could have done a much better job with this book. Charles starts off acting like an ass and by the end he hasn't really changed. The main plot of the book (Charles trying to seduce Rachel) is boring. Throw in Charles in-ability to use his brain and you have the rare occasion where the protagonist in a book is actually disliked by the reader. Luckily for Amis the side characters and explicit humor were enough to allow his writing career to continue. The book provides some humor but not quite enough to not fall asleep during the boring parts. In the end so may want to save yourself the time and not read it at all, that's just my opinion, cause this is a love-it-or-hate-it kind of book.
Book Description
This book questions the book itself, archivization, machines for writing, and the mechanicity inherent in language, the media, and intellectuals. Derrida questions what takes place between the paper and the machine inscribing it. He examines what becomes of the archive when the world of paper is subsumed in new machines for virtualization, and whether there can be a virtual event or a virtual archive.
Derrida continues his long-standing investigation of these issues, and ties them into the new themes that governed his teaching and thinking in the past few years: the secret, pardon, perjury, state sovereignty, hospitality, the university, animal rights, capital punishment, the question of what sort of mediatized world is replacing the print epoch, and the question of the “wholly other.” Derrida is remarkable at making seemingly occasional pieces into part of a complexly interconnected trajectory of thought.
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The Selected Letters of George Oppen
Rachel Blau DuPlessis
Manufacturer: Duke University Press
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Binding: Paperback
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New Collected Poems
ASIN: 0822310244 |
Book Description
Objectivist poet George Oppen (1908–1984), along with his contemporaries Lorine Niedecker, Charles Reznikoff, and Carl Rakoski, provide an important bridge between the vanguard modernist American poets and the later works of poets such as Robert Creeley. In work often compounded by the populist urbanity of city lives, the Objectivists explored the social statements poetry can make. Because Oppen wrote only one essay and one essay-review, his correspondence, in effect, constitutes his essays. Oppen is emerging as one of the major poets of the postwar era; he was the recipient of an American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters Award, the PEN/West Rediscovery Award, and a Senior Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. His collection Of Being Numerous received the 1969 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.
These working papers include a rich correspondence, letters which provide access to the sustained, perceptive body of critical and aesthetic thinking of Oppen’s poetic career. Provocative and witty comments on poetry and poetics, especially interesting for the development of an Objectivist aesthetics, and shrewd, deeply felt assessments about the politics of the twentieth century and its moral dilemmas are some of the issues attended to. This edition offers primary documentation about an influential poetics, a little-known movement, and its active figures. Given the aggressive studies of the politics of canon-formation, the interest in describing a historical context for individual literary achievement, and current debates about mainstream poetry, the rethinking of the Objectivist movement, and the collection of documents contributing to its poetics, is an important achievement in literary scholarship.
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The General Correspondence of James Boswell, 1766-1769: Volume 2: 1768-1769 (Yale Editions of the Private Papers Jame)
James Boswell
Manufacturer: Yale University Press
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Binding: Hardcover
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ASIN: 0300074034 |
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Building Sustainable Peace: Conflict, Conciliation and Civil Society in Northern Ghana (Oxfam Working Papers Series)
Ada van der Linde , and
Rachel Naylor
Manufacturer: Oxfam Publishing
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ASIN: 0855984236 |
Book Description
Intense fighting in the Northern Region of Ghana in 1994 and 1995 led to the loss of 15,000 lives and the displacement of 200,000 people. A formal peace treaty, negotiated by the government, ended the fighting but did not address the underlying causes of the conflict, which was a complex mix of economic, political, and ethnic factors.An informal consortium of NGOs, initially involved in delivering humanitarian aid, set up a parallel peace process, seeking to build up trust through a series of peace-education workshops and the creation of a multi-ethnic Youth and Development Association. The success of the process was symbolized by the signing of the Kumasi Peace Accord in 1996.This report, commissioned by the Northern Ghana Inter-NGO Consortium, demonstrates how a network of NGOs, sharing skills and building up local capacities, can play an invaluable role in promoting a sustainable peace after conflict.
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The General Correspondence of James Boswell, 1766-1769: Volume 1: 1766-1767 (Yale Editions of the Private Papers Jame)
James Boswell
Manufacturer: Yale University Press
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ASIN: 0300058039 |
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Gibbs' Annotated and Illustrated Original Papers on Thermodynamics
Craig Carter , and
Rachel Kemper
Manufacturer: CRC
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ASIN: 0849396867 |
Book Description
Gibbs' Annotated and Illustrated Original Papers on Thermodynamics presents accessible amplification of the original concepts, explanations, and discussion of thermodynamics of Willard Gibbs, father of thermodynamics and vector analysis. Laid out similar to translated foreign language texts, Professor Craig Carter's book offers modern visual figures and explanation alongside Dr. Gibbs' original scientific notation to explain the concepts and simplify difficult language. This valuable original work also includes companion web-based, three-dimensional models and a summary of points at the end of each chapter. This volume makes the conceptual basis of thermodynamics accessible for all students in civil engineering, mechanical engineering, materials engineering, chemical engineering, and physical science.
Customer Reviews:
We love Marisa Carroll books!.......2002-07-21
"Tyler" is a series surrounding a community. It's not a need-to-have-read-the-one-before type of series. Thank God!
This installment deals with the surviving daughter of a murder
victim. A trial has recently ended with giving answers as to
who killed Alyssa's mother. She and Edward Wocheck want to get
on with a life together. But terrible dreams giving clues about
the murder stand in the way. GREAT STUFF!!!
Average customer rating:
- Follett knows just which buttons to push, and when to push them
- Not as bad as the reviews make it out to be
- Slick and empty
- wow good book!
- Like all Follett books, this one starts interestingly enough
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Code to Zero
Ken Follett
Manufacturer: NAL Trade
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ASIN: 0451216725 |
Amazon.com
Veteran thriller writer Ken Follett (Eye of the Needle, The Third Twin, The Key to Rebecca) turns in another nifty story of espionage, deceit, and betrayal, a fast-paced read with "bestseller" written all over it. A man wakes up in a Washington, D.C., train station in 1958, shortly before the launch of Explorer I, America's first space satellite, with no idea who he is or how he got there. And in less than a few hours, it's clear that someone doesn't want him to find out. He's dressed like a bum, and he looks like he's been on a bender. But he's remarkably skillful at evading pursuit, obscuring his tracks, stealing a car, and breaking into a house. He's not sure how he came by those talents, and it worries him:
"I wonder if I'm honest?" Maybe it was foolish, he thought, to pour out his heart to a whore on the street, but he had no one else. "Am I a loyal husband and a loving father and a reliable workmate? Or am I some kind of gangster? I hate not knowing."
"Honey, if that's what's bothering you, I know what kind of guy you are already. A gangster would be thinking, am I rich, do I slay the broads, are people scared of me?"
That was a point. Luke nodded. But he was not satisfied. "It's one thing to want to be a good person--but maybe I don't live up to what I believe in."
But he does, and it's that firm interior moral compass that keeps him on track through the novel's most fascinating pages as he solves the puzzle of who he really is: Claude "Luke" Lucas, a renowned rocket scientist who was en route from Cape Canaveral to Washington to warn someone in the Pentagon about something he also can't remember, even with the help of some of his oldest friends. Like Anthony Carroll, a CIA agent who apparently has proof that Luke's been sabotaging the fledgling American space program and working for the Russians. And Billie Josephson, the woman Luke once loved, who happens to be an expert in brainwashing and memory loss. And Elspeth, Luke's mathematician wife, who'll do almost anything to save his life.
This is one of Follett's strongest books in years. The flashbacks bring the story of the idealistic young collegians from World War II into 1958, nicely setting up the action in an exciting, solidly plotted, and suspenseful read that grabs the reader by the throat in the first paragraph and doesn't let up until the last. --Jane Adams
Book Description
In this classic Cold War thriller, #1 New York Times bestselling author Ken Follett puts his own electrifying twist on the space race between the U.S. and the Soviet Union.
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At Cape Canaveral, a countdown has begun in January 1958. On launch pad 26B sits Explorer 1, America's best hope to match the Soviet Sputnik and regain the lead in the race for the skies above. In the meanwhile, a man wakes to find himself lying on the ground in a railway station. And until he remembers who he is, he may be left powerless to save the launch of Explorer--and with it, America's future.
Customer Reviews:
Follett knows just which buttons to push, and when to push them.......2007-10-04
It's early in 1958. Reeling from the Soviet Union's Sputnik success, the United States struggles desperately to catch up. Thus far, those efforts have resulted in a series of spectacular failures. Now the hopes of a nation, and the future of the U.S. space program, hinge on the successful launch of Explorer I, scheduled to lift off on January 29th.
The odds against a successful launch, however, are even more formidable than anyone anticipated. Technical obstacles were to be expected. Internal problems were not. A Soviet mole, his role until now limited to passing American technology to Moscow, has been instructed to sabotage the launch.
With the future of the free world at stake, only one man can foil the Soviet plan. Unfortunately, with only two days until launch, he doesn't even know about it. That man, you see, has just awakened in a Washington, D.C., subway station, smelling of alcohol -- apparently one of the numerous homeless who have found shelter there. He can't remember who he is or how he got there. Armed with only a single clue -- a fellow traveler addresses him as "Luke" -- he begins a perilous search for his identity, a search that ultimately leads him into direct conflict with a Soviet spy network intent on preventing U.S. entry into space.
Powered by this intriguing premise, Code to Zero hurtles to its surprising climax with blinding speed, taking readers for a hair-raising ride. Although some may find it a bit melodramatic (perhaps intentionally, Follett's writing style echoes that of novels written during the early days of the space race, and the success of the hero's search often hinges on coincidence and breathtaking, intuitive leaps of logic), most will find Code to Zero an enjoyable read, if only because of Follett's painstaking attention to detail -- he provides copious information about the technical side of the launch, and about the state of psychology at the time -- and the intriguing supporting cast he has assembled.
Although Follett is not quite at the top of his form here, Code to Zero is head-and-shoulders above most of its current competition. After three decades in the business, the author knows just which buttons to push, and when to push them.
Not as bad as the reviews make it out to be.......2007-09-03
I don't understand why all the negative reviews. I found this book fast-paced and entertaining. It reminded me a lot of The Bourne Identity and Paycheck. Though not as good as The Bourne Identity, it was a very enjoyable read. Definitely a great beach or vacation read.
If you didn't like this book, give Ken Follett another chance-- read The Key to Rebecca. That's what got me hooked.
Slick and empty .......2007-02-22
Like most Ken Follett books, Code to Zero is very cinematic. The plotting is tight, and everything that happpens moves us towards the ultimate goal of the rocket launch at Cape Canaveral. There's lots of action, and several appealing subplots, including a romance. Yet I was frustrated and disappointed in the end.
For a book set in such a recent historical period, Code to Zero is surprisingly sloppy in its details. A character lives in Houston and teaches at Baylor University, a mere 184 miles away. Long commute. A character laments that "life sucks," at least thirty years before the phrase gained common parlance. On a related note, a respectable woman talks openly about a certain sexual practice, which I recall being a mortifying taboo for most women well into the 1980s.
Most irritatingly, Follett completely bungles the portrayal of the era's race relations. Marigold, Luke's sassy black secretary, wouldn't have lasted two minutes before being run out of 1950s Huntsville, Alabama, much less employed in a responsible position on a military base for two decades. President Truman did not even order the desegregation of the civil service until 1948.
Follett should have known better than to make these errors, and far from being minor, they symbolize what's wrong with Code to Zero. It's a slick and empty exercise, passably entertaining but unconvincing either as a period piece or as human drama.
wow good book!.......2006-11-03
This review pertains to George Guidall's audio book reading. "Code To Zero" was my first book by Ken Follett, but it won't be my last.
I'm shocked by the low consensus 3 stars that Amazon readers have given this dazzling novel. I was blown away by the storyline and the well-drawn out characters. The flashbacks were used to perfection. The little bits of technical info on America's first space launch kept the suspense humming. I thought it was interesting how the role of communism in Ivy League schools was played out in the 40's and 50's.
I don't give 5 stars to my reviews unless I can highly recommend them. I highly recommend Code To Zero.
Like all Follett books, this one starts interestingly enough.......2006-09-29
This book starts off with a character who does not know who he is. This guy is wandering around dressed as a bum, smelling of alcohol, and lacks any memory of his past. One strange thing is that he is being followed by people he keeps seeing over and over again. Are they his imaginings? Or is someone keeping tabs on him?
This is how Follett's Code to Zero starts out. And the first hundred or so pages are engaging beyond most of Folletts other work. As the plot starts to come together however, the story starts to become mundane and processed. The plot is set around the earliest stages of the US space program, just after Sputnik one and two were put into space. The protagonist is a lead scientist on the US program who is being taken out of the picture for some reason that he cant understand.
Follett has a lot of gifts as an author. rarely does his work hold together as a near masterpiece like his earier Pillars on the Earth. Code to Zero is not great, but it is one of the better Follett books that I have read. I think that if you enjoy his other writings this one will satisfy you greatly.
Product Description
4 books in one
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Code To Zero
Ken Follett
Manufacturer: MacMillan
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
ASIN: B000HKFG70 |
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Code to Zero
Ken Follett
Manufacturer: Signet
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
ASIN: B000O7X7Z4 |
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Code to Zero
Ken Follett
Manufacturer: Recorded Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Audio Cassette
ASIN: B000N2BUIQ |
Average customer rating:
- A story of love's lost and found
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Code to Zero
Ken Follett
Manufacturer: Pan Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 0330482866 |
Customer Reviews:
A story of love's lost and found.......2006-01-03
He wakes up in the men's room at Union Station. He can not remember who he is or how he got there. One shocking look in the mirror tells him he is a bum however he can not believe it. Now he must find out who he is. Watch answer leads him in a different direction and we are intrigued to find more about what let to this situation.
The only positive thing I can say about the story is that it is the standard Follett formula. Not quit the stature of "Eye of the needle" but better than the Follett wantobes . This is more like a Colombo episode in which we know the answer long before the characters and read to see how long it takes them to catch up with us. There are a few surprising details that pop up at the last minute. Do not look too close at real life dates and technology as many things do not match; however they do not distract from the story.
Mainly there are three elements that are intertwined through the story. One is the present (1958) where Luke has to figure out who he is and what he is doing on an urgent time schedule. The second is a detailed layman's description of how the first rockets were designed in 1958. The third is a story of a group that met in Harvard just before Pearl Harbor and went through the equivalent of the OSS together and where they ended up to the present day.
Try to find a copy of George Guidall's unabridged recorded reading as it adds a good dimension to the story and will keep you hooked to the end. I used up some predacious gasoline listing to this in the parking lot.
Once you start the story you will have to finish it. Then you may wish it did not finish so soon.
Average customer rating:
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Code To Zero
Ken Follett
Manufacturer: Dutton / Penguin
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
ASIN: B000OIRBP0 |
Book Description
Yehuda Berg’s The 72 Names of God Meditation Book is your personal torch to highlight the areas of your life where you need to shine. Through the practice of meditating on the 72 Names of God, you will stir the Light within your soul to help you. See the impact of your decisions before you make them; bring more money into your life whenever you need it; heal yourself physically and emotionally. The 72 Names of God will activate the power of miracles when you need them most.
Customer Reviews:
Very important spiritual tool.......2007-08-29
This is one of the tools Kabbalah offers us, each of the 72 names is for a specific purpose. You meditate on the name or names (one at a time) that you feel you need, in the way the book explains. The names cannot be pronounced, as they are not words, but combinations of letters, so they really don't have a meaning, but each combination of letters has a diferent energy that helps us in the way that is described in each of the meditations!!! If you want to say any specific name you say the letters, for example Mem Hey Shin, which is the name for healing. The meditations are beautiful, very wise words by Yehuda Berg, that touch your heart and your soul!!!
You can also scan the chart with the 72 names of God, in the way that is described in the book, once or twice a day.
A Blessing.......2007-08-17
This book is very inspirational and the pages are attractively designed. I appreciate the simplicity and the novelty of the technology given for improving the quality of my life. I use it every day in conjunction with 'The 72 Names of God Meditation Deck72 Names of God: Meditation Deck. The card that I choose from the Deck and the corresponding reading from the text indicate the life lesson I need to learn.Additionally I select the Name that I wish to work with. This is the next step in my spiritual development.
God's Names.......2007-06-25
Great book. I wish it had the alliterative Hebrew pronunciations for those of us who wish to be able to say these beautiful words as well as meditate on them.
A wonderful book!!!.......2006-08-05
This is a very interesting book. I fully recommend it to anyone looking for spiritual answers. You may not agree with everything -- and that's OK. But take whatever you get from this book and simply make it yours. You don't have to become a follower of Kabbalah to put some of the ideas into practice. Try it. You may like it.
Also recommended: "What Did Jesus Really Say, How Christianity Went Astray: [What To Say To A Born Again Christian Fundamentalist, But Never Had The Information]" by Peter Cayce
An Amazing Spiritual Technology .......2005-11-22
Learn how to use an amazing spiritual technology which existed before time began. The three letter names activate neurological functions in your brain allowing you to automatically alter your behavior and your life to achieve anything your heart and soul desires! One of the best and most powerful Kabbalah books ever written.
This book has all the names of the original "Technology for the Soul" book. It also has affirmations next to each name which allow you to better understand the purpose of each name and how to use the energy correctly. These phrases that you use along with the names will also increase the effectiveness of each name.
Review by DREXAR the Warrior
Author of The Vacation Diet
www.thevacationdiet.com
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