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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
Here is an outpouring and sharing of how a number of ordinary women found spiritual peace after coping with depression, broken relationships, illness and bereavement.
Their way may not be your way, but read, weep,laugh and cry as you identify with their life challenges and their discoveries about themselves. It may just help you get your life into perspective, for what they have found you can find too. Like all, our journeys continue and the route is ours to make. An inspiring read.
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Please don't try and read this wonderfully quirky book with an intellectual mind set for it is in no way a serious book. It is in actuality as absurd as it is humerous and it is in effect a huge delicious nonsense with a capital N. When you 'get this' you will not be able to stop yourself smiling at the clever word play and the wackyness of it all. It pokes fun at our language, our expectations and our life in today's world.
You may begin to hear your own internal dialogue reading in a 'Goonish' style, for the characters come alive in their own paradoxical way because they can in no way be imagined as usual or normal.
Smile, giggle and feel bemused for the irony… Read more
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
One might ask why this book is entitled 'The Suicide Dictionary', maybe in asking that very question we stretch our thinking - with each of us arriving at our own conclusion. Do we whilst reading this book 'put to death willingly' our old concepts and values?
Be prepared to step over the edge of your own limitations and trust the unfolding journey, for you will surely be taking one when you immerse yourself in the pages of this book.
The author poses the question 'What ISN'T spirituality?' and somewhere in the pages we hear the echo of an answer reverberating back. This would appear to be implying that what is written is pointing to that which is far more important… Read more
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