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A NEW UNIVERSAL DREAM

MY JOURNEY FROM SILICON VALLEY TO A LIFE IN SERVICE TO HUMANITY

An absorbing and often convincing work with a futurist vision.

An entrepreneur-turned-philanthropist shares his personal story and vision for the future in this nonfiction book.

Farrell’s autobiography is not just one of rags to riches, which itself would make a decent tale, but also one of a man who, at the peak of his career, walked away to find spiritual fulfillment and promote a new sociocultural paradigm that challenged the very notion of the American dream. Divided into four parts, this memoir and self-help guidebook tells the story of Farrell’s midlife transformation and offers his vision for a better world. The first part tells the story of the author’s early life and business career through a series of vignettes. He writes that his father first gave him cannabis in 1970, when he was 15, and he recalls an early life that included experimentation with drugs and sex and was largely without “much supervision.” There were also signs of early business acumen, as he paid off the cost of his orthodontic braces at the age of 11 using pay from a paper route and other odd jobs. At 22, he left his home in Northern Virginia for San Francisco, where he saw an initial investment of $7,500 in America Online grow to more than $1 million and co-founded and led two tech companies—Enterprise Networking Systems and Netigy—that were featured in the “INC. 500” list of the fastest-growing companies in America. The book’s second and third parts describe the author’s alienation from corporate culture and his subsequent co-founding of nonprofit organization Humanity’s Team with Neale Donald Walsch, who wrote this book’s foreword and authored the bestselling Conversations With God series. Humanity’s Team promotes a “consciousness movement” to help people around the world “awaken to their deeper self and the interconnectedness and Oneness of everything in the universe.”

Over the course of this book, Farrell effectively blends the institutional history of Humanity’s Team’s founding with self-help tips on “taking control of our destiny and making wise choices about how we live with each other and Earth.” His advice is also inspired, in part, by Walsch’s writing as well as the “conscious evolution” movement, whose proponents include futurist Barbara Marx Hubbard. The book’s final section looks to the future, as it seeks to replace the idealized American dream with a “New Universal Dream” that deprioritizes individual wealth and centers on working toward solutions to global warming, disease, war, and political upheaval. To help achieve these lofty goals, Farrell offers readers straightforward advice on small actions they can take in their own lives to achieve fulfillment, including daily meditation, service to the Earth, conscientious spending, and an acknowledgment of multiple “forms of prosperity” that go beyond money. Overall, the author’s warm and friendly writing style makes for an engaging read, as do anecdotes from his intriguing life. It’s a deeply spiritual book, as well, and one that’s likely to appeal to readers of various faith traditions—including religious skeptics, as it often uses the terms God and the Universe interchangeably.

An absorbing and often convincing work with a futurist vision.

Pub Date: May 24, 2023

ISBN: 9781958921258

Page Count: 276

Publisher: Light on Light Press

Review Posted Online: June 24, 2023

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IS THERE STILL SEX IN THE CITY?

Sometimes funny, sometimes silly, sometimes quite sad—i.e., an accurate portrait of life in one's 50s.

The further adventures of Candace and her man-eating friends.

Bushnell (Killing Monica, 2015, etc.) has been mining the vein of gold she hit with Sex and the City (1996) in both adult and YA novels. The current volume, billed as fiction but calling its heroine Candace rather than Carrie, is a collection of commentaries and recounted hijinks (and lojinks) close in spirit to the original. The author tries Tinder on assignment for a magazine, explores "cubbing" (dating men in their 20s who prefer older women), investigates the "Mona Lisa" treatment (a laser makeover for the vagina), and documents the ravages of Middle Aged Madness (MAM, the female version of the midlife crisis) on her clique of friends, a couple of whom come to blows at a spa retreat. One of the problems of living in Madison World, as she calls her neighborhood in the city, is trying to stay out of the clutches of a group of Russians who are dead-set on selling her skin cream that costs $15,000. Another is that one inevitably becomes a schlepper, carrying one's entire life around in "handbags the size of burlap sacks and worn department store shopping bags and plastic grocery sacks....Your back ached and your feet hurt, but you just kept on schlepping, hoping for the day when something magical would happen and you wouldn't have to schlep no more." She finds some of that magic by living part-time in a country place she calls the Village (clearly the Hamptons), where several of her old group have retreated. There, in addition to cubs, they find SAPs, Senior Age Players, who are potential candidates for MNB, My New Boyfriend. Will Candace get one?

Sometimes funny, sometimes silly, sometimes quite sad—i.e., an accurate portrait of life in one's 50s.

Pub Date: Aug. 6, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-8021-4726-4

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Grove

Review Posted Online: April 27, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2019

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ENRIQUE'S JOURNEY

THE TRUE STORY OF A BOY DETERMINED TO REUNITE WITH HIS MOTHER

Provides a human face, both beautiful and scarred, for the undocumented—a must-read.

2003 Pulitzer Prize–winning author Nazario’s critically acclaimed book Enrique’s Journey, a heart-wrenching account of one young man’s journey to migrate illegally from Honduras to the United States to find the mother who left when he was 5, has been newly adapted for young people.

Nazario’s vividly descriptive narrative recreates the trek that teenage Enrique made from Honduras through Mexico on the tops of freight trains. This adaptation does not gloss over or omit the harrowing dangers—beatings, rape, maiming and murder—faced by migrants coming north from Central America. The material is updated to present current statistics about immigration, legal and illegal, and also addresses recent changes in the economic and political climates of the U.S., Mexico and Honduras, including the increased danger of gang violence related to drug trafficking in Mexico. The book will likely inspire reflection, discussion and debate about illegal immigration among its intended audience. But the facts and figures never overwhelm the human story. The epilogue allows readers who are moved by Enrique to follow the family’s tragedies and triumphs since the book’s original publication; the journey does not end upon reaching the United States.

Provides a human face, both beautiful and scarred, for the undocumented—a must-read. (epilogue, afterword, notes) (Nonfiction. 14 & up)

Pub Date: Aug. 27, 2013

ISBN: 978-0385743273

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Delacorte

Review Posted Online: July 2, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2013

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