The final book of the Bible, Revelation prophesies the ultimate judgement of mankind in a series of allegorical visions, grisly images and numerological predictions. According to these, empires will fall, the "Beast" will be destroyed and Christ will rule a new Jerusalem. With an introduction by Will Self.
Apsara Valsan settles down in her hard-won seat in a prestigious medical college, little knowing that life as she knew it was going to be turned upside down in totally unexpected ways. Unforseeable, indeed unimaginable things begin to happen to her. She is led to question what she knew about herself and her family. Total strangers seem to know secrets about her which even she did not know, and put her through tests and trials that bring out the deepest powers in her psyche, making her realize ancient and powerful gifts she posessed.This is a story of student life in a medical college, where young medico Apsara confronts startling truths about herself, and is forced to go beyond the safe boundaries of her life and into a mysterious world of dark strangers and unleash potent, magical powers from within her deepest self.
For millennia, war was viewed as a supreme test. In the period 1750-1850 war became much more than a test: it became a secular revelation. This new understanding of war as revelation completely transformed Western war culture, revolutionizing politics, the personal experience of war, the status of common soldiers, and the tenets of military theory.
"Ethereal Revelations - Volume I" is a moving account of how Lizelle, at the end of pregnancy, discovered another side to sex: a spiritual side. By starting to see the heavenly results of sex, set off the ability to see-a privilege with a cost-the entire spiritual realm, as contained in forthcoming volumes. In "Ethereal Revelations - Vol I: Access to Another Dimension" the cost is prepaid via a traumatizing infidelity incident with devastating protracted aftermath, causing a bizarre soul position that makes susceptibility to peculiar spiritual occurrences possible. Undesirable ethereal revelations, surface. Many poignant discussions, on appropriate-sexual-behavior-re-social-implication secrets as evoked, follow; contributing to opening more channels. "Volume I" starts this extraordinary journey in giving access to another dimension. Patient, open-minded and enlightened readers, in search of a different kind of spirituality, the truth about the incorporeal world and supreme spirituality, will be overawed.
Revelations of a Human Space Navigator provides explanations of who and what humans actually are and why they behave as they do, as well as, explaining from what everything is physically made of, and why the physical behavior of all this physical existence makes it impossible for 'time' and gods to physically exist.
At a time when the methods and purposes of intelligence agencies are under a great deal of scrutiny, author Wesley Britton offers an unprecedented look at their fictional counterparts. In Beyond Bond: Spies in Film and Fiction, Britton traces the history of espionage in literature, film, and other media, demonstrating how the spy stories of the 1840s began cementing our popular conceptions of what spies do and how they do it. Considering sources from Graham Greene to Ian Fleming, Alfred Hitchcock to Tom Clancy, Beyond Bond looks at the tales that have intrigued readers and viewers over the decades. Included here are the propaganda films of World War II, the James Bond phenomenon, anti-communist spies of the Cold War era, and military espionage in the eighties and nineties. No previous book has considered this subject with such breadth, and Britton intertwines reality and fantasy in ways that illuminate both. He reveals how most themes and devices in the genre were established in the first years of the twentieth century, and also how they have been used quite differently from decade to decade, depending on the political concerns of the time. In all, Beyond Bond offers a timely and penetrating look at an intriguing world of fiction, one that sometimes, and in ever-fascinating ways, can seem all too real. At a time when the methods and purposes of intelligence agencies are under a great deal of scrutiny, author Wesley Britton offers an unprecedented look at their fictional counterparts. In Beyond Bond: Spies in Film and Fiction, Britton traces the history of espionage in literature, film, and other media, demonstrating how the spy stories of the 1840s began cementing our popular conceptions of what spies do and how they do it. Considering sources from Graham Greene to Ian Fleming, Alfred Hitchcock to Tom Clancy, Beyond Bond looks at the tales that have intrigued readers and viewers over the decades. Included here are the propaganda films of World War II, the James Bond phenomenon, anti-communist spies of the Cold War era, and military espionage in the eighties and nineties. No previous book has considered this subject with such breadth, and Britton intertwines reality and fantasy in ways that illuminate both. He reveals how most themes and devices in the genre were established in the first years of the twentieth century, and also how they have been used quite differently from decade to decade, depending on the political concerns of the time. And he delves into such aspects of the genre as gadgetry, technology, and sexuality-aspects that have changed with the times as much as the politics have. In all, Beyond Bond offers a timely and penetrating look at an intriguing world of fiction, one that sometimes, and in ever-fascinating ways, can seem all too real.