Monthly Archives: May 2008

The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho for free!

The Alchemist for freeThe Alchemist for free

The Alchemist for free

My Heart Is Afraid that it will have to suffer,” the boy told the alchemist one night as they looked up at the moonless sky.”Tell your heart that the fear of suffering is worse than the suffering itself. And that no heart has ever suffered when it goes in search of its dreams.”

Every few decades a book is published that changes the lives of its readers forever. The Alchemist is such a book. With over a million and a half copies sold around the world, The Alchemist has already established itself as a modern classic, universally admired. Paulo Coelho’s charming fable, now available in English for the first time, will enchant and inspire an even wider audience of readers for generations to come.

The Alchemist is the magical story of Santiago, an Andalusian shepherd boy who yearns to travel in search of a worldly treasure as extravagant as any ever found. From his home in Spain he journeys to the markets of Tangiers and across the Egyptian desert to a fateful encounter with the alchemist.

The story of the treasures Santiago finds along the way teaches us, as only a few stories have done, about the essential wisdom of listening to our hearts, learning to read the omens strewn along life’s path, and, above all, following our dreams.

Dear readers,

You can now browse the full edition of The Alchemist (courtesy of Harper Collins) on my blog: http://paulocoelhoblog.com/

Love, Paulo

Best-Selling Author Turns Piracy into Profit

Paulo Coelho, author of books such as “The Alchemist” and “The Witch of Portobello”, sold over 100 million books last year. In part, he puts this success down to BitTorrent, as he saw a huge increase in sales when his books appeared on sites such as The Pirate Bay. We talked to Coelho to find out more about this remarkable story.

http://torrentfreak.com/best-selling-author-turns-piracy-into-profit-080512/

An Invitation to Dance (A Prayer)

To the Spirits of Saints and Sages of All Time, and to All that is Good in the Universe:

  • I am your empty dance hall –

Fill me with your music; whirl and waltz as you will.

  • I am your summer carnival –

“Step right up” to childish musings; ride my coasters and carousels.

  • I am your mountain of fire –

Raise up your molten Truth; let your exuberance erupt through me.

  • I am your Canterbury feast –

Be seated at my comedic offering; devour me that I may become you.

  • Alas, I am your Universe and you are mine –

Let’s hopscotch together upon twinkling stars and ride erudite moonbeams into the Knowing, and God shall smile upon our unrestrained exultation and the bells of Heaven shall ring!

© 2008

Unsolicited Thoughts

– An unsolicited thought –

– Continually presenting itself –

– Entering her mind without warning –

Played out like a film

Watched over and over again.

The more she tries to

Eliminate it,

The more it seems to present itself –

The sting like that of a bandage

Torn off in one quick stroke.

In time,

Its persistence will liquefy,

Much as the bile that incessantly burns her throat –

The severity slowly evolving into

A distant memory –

Carve our Initials Next

Drunk on playing hooky and Wild
Turkey, slip to the creek to make love,
oblivious to the danger presented
by sharp rocks and woken snakes.
Any minute now, a camper’s going
to stagger from a nearby tent, waving
a flashlight with one hand, grabbing
his fly with the other. Spy us
and forget to pee. So?? Got to camp
early, which meant time to take a dip
in the lake. Wore out the kids, yay.
Add blackened burgers, couple cans
of pork’n’beans and s’mores, strictly
lights out. Damp brown and yellow
cow-licks peek from Carolina blue
sleeping bags. New tent plenty big
enough to rig a curtain. You two
dragged in enough sand for a castle,
we teased over s’mores. Their turn
to laugh when I dropped my second
cracker. Chocolate rolled merrily
down my new One tee. Nothing
beats having kids. Nothing
beats sneaking in a little us-time.
Jungle loving in skin that tingles
from a good dose of sand and sun.
Not that drunk. Done, begin to chafe
where rocks dug and what-all.
We clamber up the bank, supporting
each other and feeling sheepish.
Not the brightest thing to do. Nor
the dumbest, our eyes meet to say.
What are a few scrapes and bruises?
Big stars wink in the spaces breeze-
tickled treetops open. Temp 70,
humidity 70. Big sites, nice folk.
Odd fly or skeeter, bit of grit with
your eggs and a rock or three, ‘s’awiiiight.
Just as long as time still stands still
while children sleepily open eyes
that they still believe a sandman fills.
Stay, World, stay.

(c) Phyllis Jean Green, May, 2008

Indie Excellence Book Awards

Dear friends,

I’m very proud to announce that my romantic suspense ‘Relocating Mia’ has been recognized with its second award.

Besides being named a Finalist at the 2007 USA Book News Best Book Awards “Relocating Mia” was also named a Finalist at the Indie Excellence Books Awards for 2008.

To find out more about my novel, or to order a signed copy visit my website www.rebeccalerwill.com

Thanks you so much for your kind interest,
Rebecca~

Review of "Farewell Alexandria"

Playing One's Role on the World's Stage, April 10, 2008
By  Erika Borsos "pepper flower" (Gulf Coast of FL, USA)
Antor Caspardian is a famous man, a self-made businessman who has
rubbed elbows with world leaders. He is someone whose advice is
sought by heads of countries where political conflicts and wars have
arisen. He lived a full and complicated life and in this book
"Farewell Alexandria" we learn the details of his multifaceted
personality and the many events which culminated in his status as a
world businessman, a man who stepped upon the world stage and became
a major player. Yet, hidden within his life are secrets which only he
and those very close to him know. On a personal level, perhaps all
the fame and fortune he acquired can not cover up the pain and losses
he experienced to achieve success. He never married the one true love
of his life ... yet he had two children, a son and daughter by two
different women one of whom he loved on a very deep and personal
level. He learns he has children, when they are nearly adults. This
is the one major source of his personal pain, he can not reveal he is
their father due to their social situation and his own status. Later,
they *do* learn who their real father is which has consequences in
their lives that no one can anticipate.

The seeds for his major successes in life and his personal pain were
sown and grew in Alexandria, Egypt where he lived prior to World War
I. He is the son of immigrant parents, who came from Turkey to
achieve economic freedom. His father began as a carpenter and became
a furniture artisan, famous for the high quality of his creations. He
built up a thriving business. They are Catholic and Antor was sent to
a private Catholic school where he was a very gifted student. Rather
than pursue his studies in Italy on a scholarship, Antor became
apprenticed to an accountant. Antor realized money and social status
were related to power. Those who gained wealth became powerful and
were politically connected, respected. They led very different lives
than the majority of Alexandria's citizens. He wanted this for
himself. The drive to achieve success in business and gain respect
and power were his major ambitions in life. With his accounting
background, he examined which of the banks were well connected to the
business families of Alexandria, that is where he applied for a job
and was hired. Antor became accepted by the Wirsa family who did high
level business with his bank. He met their daughter and fell head
over heels in love with Marguerite. Antor sensed she felt the same.
Her parents tolerated his social visits but had higher social and
business connected ambitions for her marriage. He pursued his
interest in her but fate turned against him. Marguerite was taken to
Europe by her parents and quickly married to the man her parents
favored. Unknown to Antor, she carried his child, unknown to her
husband, the child was fathered by someone else ... The timing was so
close, it was easy to deceive them all.

Antor's business connections and relationships prospered within
Alexandria. He put aside his personal pain and applied his energies
to his work. He learned money is what counted and if you had enough,
the world can be yours. He met a woman who taught him about social
relations and how to cultivate the rich and famous. He learned even
more about the art of seduction and what women wanted from a man. As
time passed, some of his businesses failed, he turned to new avenues
of making money. His connections to the Italians and the Jewish
merchants vanished due to events which would erupt into World War II.
Even his associatons with the British Army took a turn for the worse.
Yet, he managed to maintain relations with the King of Egypt and his
business relations began to prosper again. He dealt in Egyptian
cotton and later scrap metal. He diverted funds to Swiss acounts. In
the mid-1950s he got in early on a deal with a pharmaceutical company
which went world wide. One of his rivals in this arena was a young
entrepeneur named George Cristofides, a banker and up and coming
world-wide businessman. The reader will appreciate the unexpected
twists and turns in this story about the business and personal
relations which arise due to this association. The story and plot are
epic in scope and contain deep caverns that are examined and in which
unexpected events take on new meaning as the author so cleverly ties
together the personal love life of Antor Caspardian with the world
business events that seem to rule his life. One day, he realizes that
blood is thicker than water. He comes to appreciate the family and
children he never knew existed ... which enter his life. This is a
complicated book which includes a vast amount of recent history as
its backdrop and which reveals a twisted tale of success on a world
scale with lessons which reveal the high price paid for acheiving
power and political influence. This is a most engaging novel with
excellent plots and twists which will keep the reader fully engaged
from start to finish. Erika Borsos [pepper flower]

Posted on behalf of Derek Flower