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A HEART'S LANDSCAPE

AN INVITATION TO THE GARDEN OF MOMENTS

Rich words of wisdom on life and happiness.

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A collection of uplifting pensées featuring reassuring words and captivating images.

Lax, a meditation teacher and spiritual coach, offers a selection from her “Morning Inspiration” email newsletter of daily reflections accompanied by her own photographs. The brief musings, arranged in no particular order, are inspired by everyday encounters and recollections of her life and family. They run the gamut of inspirational themes, including the importance of living in the moment, the pleasures of spontaneity (especially impromptu dancing), the acceptance of one’s faults, and the necessity of offering love and compassion inclusively. She also addresses the beauty of nature in her native Israel and in the United States, where she lives now. Lax’s prose poems offer a variety of moods, the most common being blithe celebration—“today, enjoy a skip around the room; be enthusiastic about yourself.” There are also warmhearted aphorisms: “Gift yourself a moment to smile for no reason; The reasons may grow and grow.” There are playful accounts of humorous moments, as when the author arrived breathlessly from a bathroom pit stop to deliver a lecture only to learn that “my dress had gotten caught up in my leggings and my rear was practically exposed to all.” There’s an occasional tone of sonorous abstraction (“Call upon your inner luminosity to guide you”), but the author also, more effectively, captures human contact with evocative specificity. At her best, Lax deftly conveys subtle but moving emotional crosscurrents, as in a spare portrait of her mother: “She was a survivor, not a fan of tears. Tears were a sign of weakness, showing the absence of courage and bravery. For her, life was about survival. Tears stood in the way of survival.” The accompanying photos are beguiling, with sun-dappled seascapes, forest and mountain scenes, and lots of flowers, all rendered in lush color. Overall, many readers will find this collection to be an energizing daily constitutional for the soul.

Rich words of wisdom on life and happiness.

Pub Date: Jan. 12, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-578-96294-8

Page Count: 226

Publisher: Your Moment Press

Review Posted Online: Dec. 21, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2022

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INTIMIDATING SHADES

WHY DOES MY SISTER HATE ME?

A stiff saga of righteousness overcoming a bad seed.

Skin color fuels sibling rivalries in this family melodrama.

Vernon and Verlene Mays, a multiracial couple in DeKalb, Texas, pass on a rainbow of complexions to their four children. Family discord ensues as their eldest daughter Verna, a light-skinned beauty, conceives an intense loathing for her darker, chubbier sister Viola Grace for no clear reason aside from Viola Grace’s unfashionable looks, studiousness and angelic disposition. Verna’s meanness blossoms in high school; she cuts classes, hangs with bad girls and sighs and rolls her eyes at everything her family does. Sounds pretty typical for a teenager, but Verlene, a woman with strict Christian values, is not one to brook a jot of rebelliousness in a child and packs her daughter off to a church boarding school. Verna runs away, taking with her the story’s sole element of trouble and complexity; with her off the stage for many chapters, the novel becomes a staid chronicle of happiness and achievement. Viola does brilliantly in college and medical school and acquires an upstanding surgeon boyfriend; her brother Vernon, Jr. and sister Vernice are also paragons. Verna-less, the family gathers for joyous yuletide celebrations (primly devoid of the “pagan symbolism” of the Christmas tree) where they toast their successes and give thanks to God before rushing out to buy new Bibles. “ ‘God is good all the time, and everything is just fine,’ ” Viola Grace observes in a fitting summary of most of the narrative. It’s a relief when the prodigal Verna finally resurfaces, beaten unconscious, with years of hard living under her belt; the tearful reunions have hardly subsided when a new rivalry develops over Verna’s neglected children, whom Viola Grace has taken in. Verna is an interesting character—bruised, often nasty, aching over her estrangement from her censorious family. Unfortunately, the author disapproves of her as strongly as the other characters do; the story is so intent on deploring Verna and applauding her perfect siblings that we never learn what makes her tick.

A stiff saga of righteousness overcoming a bad seed.

Pub Date: April 1, 2010

ISBN: 978-1-4415-8934-7

Page Count: 188

Publisher: Xlibris

Review Posted Online: July 19, 2010

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THE VALKYRIES

AN ENCOUNTER WITH ANGELS

A facile New Age story in which the author and his wife are initiated into the cult of angels by a band of women bikers in the Mojave Desert. Coelho (The Alchemist, 1993) tells how, at the bidding of his "Master," a wealthy businessman, he and his wife, Chris, go off into the desert for 40 days to look for his guardian angel. They find their enlightenment first from Gene, a young man who lives in a trailer, and finally from eight women, known as the Valkyries, who roam the desert on motorcycles and whose wild leader, Valhalla, becomes the couple's mystagogue. Coelho's basic message is that Paradise is open and angels are present if only we break the pact of our self-betrayal and learn to conquer fear and the distractions of our "second mind." Unfortunately, he fails to go anywhere with this potentially exciting but hardly original vision. What he offers is a kind of doctrinal salad in which belief in angels, channeling, and casual sex are mixed with references to Magic rites, Catholic worship, and reincarnation. Coelho uses his characters to emphasize the dubious position that spiritual knowledge can be gained without any connection to how one lives. At times his wisdom turns out to be the familiar exhortation to follow our dreams, and he asserts, without clarification, that we are all manifestations of the Absolute. Coelho's ignorance and superficiality are most blatant when he tells us that St. Mary of Egypt was canonized for her promiscuity and is remembered by almost no one today, whereas in fact, she was converted during her famous visit to Jerusalem, spent the rest of her life as a penitent, and is solemnly commemorated every year by the Orthodox Church all over the world. More pap for the spiritually challenged.

Pub Date: Sept. 1, 1995

ISBN: 0-06-251291-9

Page Count: 240

Publisher: N/A

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 1995

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