Free: LORDS OF LIGHT BY DEEPAK CHOPRA (SHIPPING COSTS $9.00 USA/ $12.00 CANADA/ EXACT COST INTERNATIONAL) - Fiction Books - Listia.com Auctions for Free Stuff

LORDS OF LIGHT BY DEEPAK CHOPRA (SHIPPING COSTS $9.00 USA/ $12.00 CANADA/ EXACT COST INTERNATIONAL)

  • 1 watching
  •  

  • Thunder Bay CANADA (map)
  • $9.00 flat rate shipping (United States)
    $12.00 flat rate shipping (Canada)
    Winner pays exact shipping (Everywhere else)
SHIPPING COSTS

USA $9.00

CANADA $12.00

EXACT COST INTERNATIONAL

THE MORE BOOKS YOU GET CHEAPER THE SHIPPING IS.

https://youtu.be/de7SfYlpDHY

Get ready for a trip down the modern-day version of Carroll’s rabbit hole. As soon as Michael Aulden steps out of his jeep in Iraq, he enters a world where time is random, place varies on a whim, and his past changes at the beck and call of someone else. Michael may be one of the 36 pure souls who are tasked by God to hold creation together. His job is to protect the world from the Prophet, the most dangerous man in the world. The Prophet’s goal is to destroy evil in the world so only good is left. He seems to may have the power to do it. However, the consequence of his success threatens the basis of creation itself. Michael is chosen to defeat the Prophet because Michael also wants to rid the world of evil. Apparently, only a person like Michael, who has the same goal, can stop the Prophet. Michael has been sucked into this realm of unreality, and now he has to figure out the weird rules of creation through the looking glass. It all revolves around the concepts of Yetzer ha-ra (impulse for evil) and Yetzer ha-rov (impulse for good) and their importance on being human.

The story is filled with reality checks and misses. Michael has a girlfriend (Susan) and his form changing guides who try to help him with riddles. The experiences don’t necessarily become clues one can use to solve the mystery. In fact many could be taken out without losing the thread of the story – and many more could be added in. The length of the book seemed to be determined by the number of the illogical experiences that Chopra decided to wrap into the package. For me, it seemed to be just about right. I found the whole Yetzer thing to be an interesting explanation for the importance of good and evil.

Questions & Comments
Sort By:

    Got a question or comment? Please log in or sign up

    Sponsored Links