This is a phenomenal book -- it belongs on every parents nightstand, on bookshelves in our schools, and as required reading for elementary educators. I recommend this book to expectant parents, parents with young children, and anyone who values and understands the importance of a nurturing environment for children.
Used price: $44.95
Buy one from zShops for: $39.89
Used price: $14.90
Buy one from zShops for: $11.30
That the Ennegram seems to work as a personality analysis tool confirms the depth of the symbol. I can not see that there is anything wrong in putting the Enneagram in use. The value of the Enneagram, or any other symbol, system or idea, can only be in its use. Looking at the Enneagram and admiring its form is one thing, but does not take us anywhere.
As to Mouravieff - I do think it is a great pity that he tried to marry up Gurdjieff and Christianity in areas where there are no chances of doing it without becoming ridiculous; "The Fifth Way" is just one of the inventions. Having not followed it I do not know where it takes you (if it does).
The Fellowship of Friends is not exactly following Gurdjieff's teaching, but that is not to say that one could not learn something from them. At least a bit of marketing...
Mr. Patterson has dared to take on some of the spiritual cannibals that have stolen and distorted the teachings of G.I. Gurdjieff. Though this book is guaranteed to infuriate followers of Palmer, Ichazo, Burton's cultists, Amiss etc.
First he takes on the Ennegram popularizes like Ichazo, Naranjo and the voluminous Helen Palmer who dared to claim instruction by a noted 4th Way teacher and turned out to never have met the man. Patterson also exposes her as a shallow new-age type of thinker with a penchant for self-promotion through her own words.
She has no real lineage nor even formal instruction in the 4th way nor any real tradition for that matter. Of course the shadowy showman Ichazo(much like Castenada) is put in for good measure. He systematically goes about deconstructing Ichazo premises on the ennegram and his mythical and oft changing spiritual pedigree.
Patterson then goes after The Fellowship of Friends or people of the Bookmark(as known here in Calif - as his followers used to stuff burton's calling cards in 4th Way books.) A 4th way cult based on Burton's strong persona. Patterson show's Burton to be a posuer and con-artist without real instruction or lineage. Burton main claim to fame is his ability to milk money out of followers and make himself wealthy. F of F is also a considered a outright cult. Check out Steve Hassans web site for info.
Another target is Robin Amiss(...) and his long dead predecessor Boris Mouravieff who concocted the notion that Gurdjieff's teachings were fundamentally derived from Eastern Christianity. Amiss is shown to be a clever fabricator of facts in his book "A Different Christianity" and distorter of truths. Patterson does a fine job exposing Mouravieff motivations for doing what he did.
Amiss is taken to task in a systematic manner in which he compared G's teachings to Eastern Orthodox material. Replete with references he demolishes Amiss's claims. BTW all anyone needs to do is get a copy of O's "In Search of the Mircaluous" a copy of the Philokalia or Theophans works and compare them. You'l see that there is no place for a householder in serious myticism. It's for monks only. St. Theophan was a hermit and monk - hardly someone who understood the way of the householder.
Also there is no mention of 'self-observation' or 'self-remembering'. Anyone whose ever practiced the Jesus Prayer and done any sort of 'self-observation' knows they are not the same.
Amiss's hidden teachers are also shown to be fabrications without reality.
You'll also learn how Mouravieff played a in the split between Ouspensky and G. And how he conned O into delaying publication of "Tales of the Miraculous"
Overall a fine book demonstrating how self-taught self-promoters can [copy] teachings and convince people they have the real thing. So much so that their followers can longer know the real deal from the fake. If Patterson comes off shrill or a purist perhaps it's because so many people have stolen from G and peddled garbage under his name.
Overall a fine book on that belongs estoricist reader's bookshelf.
Buy one from zShops for: $19.00
Jean
Used price: $4.70
Collectible price: $4.75
Buy one from zShops for: $5.65
Used price: $17.00
Collectible price: $99.99
"The Gurdjieff-work" has been quite protected until now, but now it seems, that since most of the great followers have died, the the old saying can be applied: When the cat is out, the mice are dancing. Well, here we have quite a big mouse, rather a...
The reviews of "Eating the I" by the same author stronly
suggest that this problem is repeating itself here again!
not for the serious. Patterson gives in to the fascination of
the "rainbowpress", reducing readers and writers to this sort of "sharks, thriving in pecking in the serious work and suffering of people, who are far above them"!
Used price: $15.00
Collectible price: $63.53
condescension towards women and lots of hidden advertisement.
It covers a period in the adult life of William Patrick Patterson. He's a writer and editor in the cutthroat milieu of New York City. He's also married, and tempted by bold, modern women. He rises like a meteor and is shot down by an office competitor. He knows wealth and poverty, arrogance and fear. He finds and honors a rare spiritual teacher. More than one in fact. There's cussing, drinking, verbal clashes, and relationships gone bad.
It's not the bald subject matter, but the insights and principles that illuminate it that distinguish this book from an ordinary memoir. Here is one of many examples: Patterson faces an ugly truth underlying his employment situation concerning the way a boss is using and mistreating him. He withdraws his cooperation from the boss at a critical moment, knowing full well the it will at least create extreme unpleasantness at the office if not result in his ultimate dismissal. He has upset an equilibrium that needed to be upset, yet what will the consequences be? Can he get control and set the situation right or not? There is no way of knowing this at the moment his decision must be made. He is on a fatal trajectory that continues when the co-worker confronts him and demands an explanation for Patterson's absence from an award dinner. Should he appease his adversary by making a phony excuse? "These two "I"'s inside me debate. The one, very rational, mature-sounding. The arguments are so reasonable, sensible. So what if I lie - so what? But then, just at the last instant, a feeling comes of total disgust - disgust for what stood before me, disgust with that whole way of life. And inside that feeling a silent voice declares: I-am-not-going-to-lie-to-him.
I tell him: "No excuse."
"What!" he screams and sags, a look of horror, bewilderment, frozen to his face .......
And something falls away and I know right then: I have broken free of him."
Later he tells his wife that he'll apologize if she really wants him too but is not optimistic about doing it, because: "I feel like there's you know, a big movement going on. Big wheels are turning. I'm at the interval in the octave. all this has to happen. I'm being moved on now."
How right he was. At the end of the book he had moved on and found some peace. With his wife, with his departed teacher the formidable Lord Pentland, and with a new career. No this is not a book claiming that the Fourth Way will make one rich, sexy, happy, or lucky. But it is about what the study and practice of the Fourth Way looks like from the inside of a modern man in modern society, which is where it was meant to be practiced all along.
Used price: $7.95
Collectible price: $25.00
Buy one from zShops for: $19.86
They really believe, that their press-pass gives them the right to dig in the life of others and sniff around to find whatever might be sensational, while in truth its nothing else than an excuse for their own cheap upside-down goals.
Although quite different from one another this group of women would come to share a common aim, to awaken. They would become the Ladies of the Rope, a group of women, all lesbian except one, that G.I. Gurdjieff choose to disseminate his teaching of the Fourth Way in Paris in 1935 .
The book is an intimate account of lunches, dinners, trips, meetings, conversations and life with Mr. Gurdjieff. These times were used by Mr. Gurdjieff to deliver "shocks" to allow them to see themselves as they truly were, not as they thought themselves to be. The author did extensive research in numerous archives, which enabled Ladies of the Rope to be told factually through letters, diaries, notes and memoirs.
Because it is based on their own writings and notes, this book is an authentic exploration of their friendships, personal relationships and their work with Mr. Gurdjieff. The author gives the reader an inside look at who the ladies of the rope were before they met Mr. Gurdjieff, during their days with their teacher and after his death. It shows a glimpse of the teacher/student relationship Mr. Gurdjieff shared with this group of women and the lifelong bond the women shared with one another.
This book is unparalleled, as no other work exists that has told this wonderful story. For those of us too feeble to make the long trek to another country to search out and carefully study these women's papers and notes, a big, big, Thank You to the author. Finally these women have been brought to light as the group of true warriors in the Work that they were and still are.
List price: $39.98 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $4.00
Collectible price: $15.00
Buy one from zShops for: $7.21
It is relatively entertaining if you can stretch your imagination, and it is definitely fast paced: I finished it in one evening. However it really isn't that great of a book. First, there are way too many characters. The only character you can really feel anything for is Anne, because her story is told in the first person. As for the rest of the characters you feel so detached from them you really don't care what their fate will be. They aren't very well drawn out either past a surface level. The writing also isn't up to the quality that you expect from Patterson. Also, the ending is very cheesy. As well, the entire time I was reading I couldn't help but think of the Schwarzenegger movie 'End of Days' I was half expecting Arnie to appear in the book at any time saying "I vil stop ze Devil" There were also some glaring editing errors. One major one that comes to mind was the fact that early in the book Anne was "nearing thirty", and at the end she was 34 years old. Very rapid aging indeed. Perhaps it was due to the apocalyptic circumstances? Hmmm... I could go on with more errors but I digress. You just shouldn't see sloppy editing like that in a novel by a top author.
Overall, I would say that as a library book it was OK, but if I had paid money for it I would be disappointed. Patterson should stick with what he does best, and should also take a little more care in his writing.
Patterson brings this early effort up to speed and modernizes it. This one contains mentions of the internet and even 'N Sync has a reference. But what he also brings is a more polished style of writing and that, I think, is all to the better for the reader. Sure, the story is more along the lines of a made for TV movie, but Patterson uses his usual bag of tricks - short, distinct chapters, lots of dialogue, and many changes of scene - to move the plot along. Anne Fitzgerald is a former nun now turned private eye. She is asked by the Cardinal of the Archdiocese of Boston to investigate, Kathleen, one of the virgins. She ends up going from being Kathleen's investigator to being Kathleen's protector. She does meet the other virgin, Colleen, who lives in Ireland (natch), but Colleen is investigated more by Father Rossetti, a priest from the Vatican, who is told the third and final secret of Fatima. And that's what get's everyone running. You know that you are in for a good time when the Cardinal asks Anne two questions right in a row" "Do you believe in God?" followed by "Do you still carry a gun?". Oh boy!
Patterson adds an epilogue to this story that tends to tie the loose ends up a little better and the secret of "Who's who" or, perhaps, "Who isn't", is somewhat revealed with a clue early in the book. Still, Patterson goes great guns with the action. This is a good read for a rainy saturday afternoon. It has everything anyone would want: action, intrigue, supernatural elements, mystery, romance, cradle, and all. Enjoy.
CRADLE AND ALL's concept is incredulous; but accept it - readers will be treated to a read with stupendous climax towards the end where the twist is unpredictible and the revelation - an ultimate surprise. The middle of the novel tends to hit a snag with Patterson rhethorically describing the fear in Kathleen over - but rescues it after the story takes flight again when the birth arrives.
James Patterson's supernatural fable will please fans and enthrall with its fusion of religion, emotions and strong characters that stand by themselves.
A few things she talked about really stood out to me. One was how her one son could come down with a fever after a shopping trip to the mall, because it was too much for him to handle. We need to consider that children need to have QUIET lives! Another thing was that they had an 11 yr. old foster child live with them, and this child said that noone had ever read her a bedtime story. The author loved this child, but because she was ignored and unloved in her earlier years, it was never possible for her to really love or be loved. This brought out the importance of the early years in the life of a child, for they are truly the formative years of a person's character and personality. We cannot afford to ignore the years from birth to age 7. And the one thing that was so neat was that one mother asked the author to suggest what she could get for her preschool son, for the only thing she could think of was a video game. The author suggested a playstand, some cotton cloths, some baskets filled with clothespins, crystals, etc. The mother thought this was weird, but she did it. Well, was she ever surprised that her son LOVED these gifts, and spent all Christmas day playing happily with his sister!! We CAN be simple with our children, and because if it, they CAN be creative and happy. Do yourself and your children a favor and read this book. You'll be glad you did.