Celestine Prophecy
2 journalers for this copy...
It is a paperback edition with 282 pages.
From Amazon.com:
It is a spiritual/adventure tale.
The saga begins when the unnamed middle-aged male narrator whimsically quits his nondescript life to track down an ancient Peruvian manuscript (pretentiously called the Manuscript) containing nine Insights that supposedly prophesy the modern emergence of New Age spirituality. South of the border, he encounters resistance from the Peruvian government and church authorities, who believe the document will undermine traditional family values. While dodging evil soldiers, paranoid priests and pseudoscientific researchers, our hero sequentially discovers all nine Insights during a series of chance encounters. Redfield has a real talent for page-turning action, and his lightweight quest employs auras, energy transfers and other psychic phenomena. But several of the Insights are incredibly vacuous and politically correct, and long stretches of dialogue are banal and cliched.
From Amazon.com:
It is a spiritual/adventure tale.
The saga begins when the unnamed middle-aged male narrator whimsically quits his nondescript life to track down an ancient Peruvian manuscript (pretentiously called the Manuscript) containing nine Insights that supposedly prophesy the modern emergence of New Age spirituality. South of the border, he encounters resistance from the Peruvian government and church authorities, who believe the document will undermine traditional family values. While dodging evil soldiers, paranoid priests and pseudoscientific researchers, our hero sequentially discovers all nine Insights during a series of chance encounters. Redfield has a real talent for page-turning action, and his lightweight quest employs auras, energy transfers and other psychic phenomena. But several of the Insights are incredibly vacuous and politically correct, and long stretches of dialogue are banal and cliched.
Released 14 yrs ago (3/30/2010 UTC) at
CONTROLLED RELEASE NOTES:
Journal Entry 3 by earthcaroleanne from Falkirk, Scotland United Kingdom on Saturday, April 10, 2010
Wow, thank you so much. One of the girls at work has gone on about this book so much, I need to read it. And thanks too for the little pressies. I love your postcards - I'm going to make it to Budapest one day.
Thanks again!
Thanks again!