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      • world-wide-wealth (c/o autónomy)

        ... wealth is not materialism - not in universe (only 5% is about matter) and not on earth (it´s all about education: i.a. as a buddhists, you are happy, if YOU are happy - and not comparing - and NOT buying things you don´t need, with money you don´t have, to impress people you don´t like ... ). I invented the formulas of TIME (as such), SPACE (as such) and DYNAMIC  RELATIVITY ( as such ... relativizing Albert Einstein - and explaining the 95% of astronomy not known up to now:  23% "dark matter" and 72" "dark energy"). Wealth is not materialistic. At least not in universe, expanding since 13.8 billion years, with faaar less problems, than those of the so called "homo-sapiens"...  . "Space" in the 4th ("energetic-") dimension (not in the "low-level" 3-D-version of combating for territories or market-shares), space, is the top of the top targets of universe - and all this is transferable to mankind ... in order to achieve  world-wide-wealth !!!

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      • Fiction
        July 2017

        Widdershins

        by Helen Steadman

        'Did all women have something of the witch about them?'   Based on the little-known 1650 witch trials in Newcastle, England, which resulted in the biggest mass execution of witches in one day on English soil.   Unusually for ‘witcherature’, this book explores the development and make-up of the witchfinder as well as the witches.   Jane Chandler is an apprentice healer. From childhood, she and her mother have used herbs to cure the sick. But Jane will soon learn that her sheltered life in a small village is not safe from the troubles of the wider world.   From his father's beatings to his uncle's raging sermons, John Sharpe is beset by bad fortune. Fighting through personal tragedy, he finds his purpose: to become a witch-finder and save innocents from the scourge of witchcraft.   Inspired by true events, Widdershins tells the story of the women who were persecuted and the men who condemned them.

      • Fiction
        April 2019

        Sunwise

        by Helen Steadman

        ‘There is a madness come upon England of late.’   Sunwise is the sequel to Widdershins, and it picks up where the first book left off in 1650, following the execution of Jane’s mother, alongside 16 other alleged witches.   When Jane’s lover, Tom, returns from the navy to find her unhappily married to his betrayer, Jane is caught in an impossible situation. Still reeling from the loss of her mother at the hands of the witch-finder John Sharpe, Jane has no choice but to continue her dangerous work as a healer while keeping her young daughter safe.   But, as Tom searches for a way for him and Jane to be together, the witch-finder is still at large. Filled with vengeance, John will stop at nothing in his quest to rid England of the scourge of witchcraft.   Inspired by the true events of the Newcastle witch trials, Sunwise tells the story of one woman's struggle for survival in a hostile and superstitious world.

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