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      • Biography: religious & spiritual
        December 2010

        Immortal Longings

        F.W.H. Myers and the Victorian Search for Life After Death

        by Hamilton, Trevor, A01

        Immortal Longings: FWH Myers and the Victorian search for life after death is the first full-length biography of Frederic W.H. Myers, leading figure in the Society for Psychical Research and friend and associate of Browning, Gladstone, Ruskin...

      • Islam

        Al-Qushayri's Epistle on Sufism

        Al-risala Al-qushayriyya Fi 'Ilm Al-tasawwuf

        by Abu 'L-qasim Al-qushayri

        The author of the Epistle on Sufism, Abu 'l-Qasim al-Qushayri (376/986-465/1074), was a famous Sunni scholar and mystic (Sufi) from Khurasan in Iran. His Epistle is probably the most popular Sufi manual ever. Written in 437/1045, it has served as a primary textbook for many generations of Sufi novices down to the present. Al-Qushayri has given us an illuminating insight into the everyday lives of Sufi devotees of the eighth to eleventh centuries C.E. and the moral and ethical dilemmas they were facing in trying to strike a delicate balance between their ascetic and mystical convictions and the exigencies of life in a society governed by rank, wealth, and military power. In al-Qushayri's narrative, the Sufi 'friends of God' (awaliya') are depicted as the true, if uncrowned, 'kings' of this world, not those worldly rulers who appear to be lording it over the common herd of believers. Yet, even the most advanced Sufi masters should not take salvation for granted. Miracle-working, no matter how spectacular, cannot guarantee the Sufi a 'favorite outcome' in the afterlife, for it may be but a ruse on the part of God who wants to test the moral integrity of his servant. In the Epistle, these and many other Sufi motifs are illustrated by the anecdotes and parables that show al-Qushayri's fellow Sufis in a wide variety of contexts: suffering from hunger and thirst in the desert, while performing pilgrimage to Mecca, participating in 'spiritual concerts', reciting the Qur'an, waging war against the 'infidel' enemy and their own desires, earning their livelihood, meditating in a retreat, praying, working miracles, interacting with the 'people of the market-place', their family members and peers, dreaming, and dying. The reader is invited to explore the fascinating world of Islamic ascetic and mystical piety carefully assembled for us by this talented Sufi writer.

      • Mind, Body, Spirit: thought & practice
        September 2005

        Shadow, Self, Spirit

        Essays in Transpersonal Psychology

        by Daniels, Michael, A01

        Transpersonal Psychology concerns the study of those states and processes in which people experience a deeper sense of who they are, or a greater sense of connectedness with others, with nature, or the spiritual dimension. This book brings together the author's writings on the topic over recent years.

      • Mind, Body, Spirit: thought & practice

        Call of the Camino

        Myths, Legends and Pilgrim Stories On the Way to Santiago De Compostela

        by Mullen Robert

      • Mind, Body, Spirit

        The Phoenix Generation

        A New Era of Connection, Compassion and Consciousness

        by Kingsley L. Dennis (Ph.D.)

        Our human psyches have been undergoing preparation for a new era of social organization and communication. This preparation is manifesting in today’s youth as new social patterns of interaction, collaboration, and mindfulness are arising and creating new productive spaces, both locally and globally. The power of energetically connected individuals, combined with out-of-the-box new paradigm thinking and creative innovation, is opening the way for the next generation – the Phoenix Generation. Today’s children, coming of age after 2020, will bring forth a new evolutionary phase in humanity. The Phoenix Generation will be born with increased instinctive intelligence, a greater degree of inherited wisdom, and will not need to be taught everything in the way we do now.

      • Literary Fiction

        The Canaan Creed

        by L. P. Hoffman

        A noble lie or a deadly secret?   Murder in Maine, wolves in Wyoming, and a fugitive—one life-changing summer for wolf biologist, Anna O’Neil. She needs answers. Who shot her father and why? Then, the arrival of a mysterious document forces Anna to examine her own beliefs and gives her the key to restore a divided community. But, first, she must find the courage to confront a hidden evil and catch her father’s killer.   The Canaan Creed is a story that needs telling—a keyhole view into a culturally-relevant and emotionally-charged issue. Radical environmentalism is on the march across America, leaving a wide swath of collateral damage. People are suffering—their voices often silenced by an agenda that omits humankind from the ecological equation.

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