It's the best book you could ever find on psychic developement. It has everything, to energy manipulation to psychometry. She shows you how to open up psychicaly step by step and the exercises are really gonna help you to develop you psychic skills. I think it's weird no body wrote a review before me because it's really the best book on psychism.
Billions and Billions:Thoughts on Life and Death at the Brink of the Millennium
This is the last book written by renowned American
astronomer and science popularizer Carl Sagan before his death in
1996.The book is a collection of essays Sagan wrote covering diverse
topics like global warming, the population explosion, extraterrestrial
life, morality, and the abortion debate. The last chapter is an account
of his struggle with myelodysplasia, the disease which finally took his
life in December 1996. Sagan's wife, Ann Druyan, wrote the epilogue of
the book after his death.
What a Life Beginning What A Life! is an exciting introduction to some of history's most amazing people. Did you know that... William Shakespeare earned almost no money from his writing?... Leonard da Vinci wrote backwards in his notebooks so that nobody could read them?... Eva Peron's body was missing for 16 years?... Pablo Picasso never threw anything away, not even empty cereal boxes?... Agatha Christie wrote a book that actually saved someone's life? These and other fascinating biographical facts can be found in What A Life.
Honolulu
William Somerset Maugham After working in British Intelligence during World War I, William Somerset Maugham set off to regain his health by traveling to Asia, Mexico, and the Pacific Islands. During this trip he gather materials and wrote the stories that appeared in 1921 in The Trembling of a Leaf. The six short stories and two "sketches" include the famous story "Rain"-adapted for both theater and film as Sadie Thompson, "Macintosh", "The Fall of Edward Barnard" .Of course love is always a subject of the tropics and Maugham's deft, ironic handling of the theme in "Red" and "Honolulu" is masterful.. These short stories are some of his best, and among the best ever written about the exotic South Seas. (Amazon.com).
Looking for local color, Somerset Maugham went slumming there and wrote this in his notebook: “You go down side-streets by the harbor, in the darkness, across a rickety bridge, and you come to a road, all ruts and holes; a little farther … there is a certain stir, an air of expectant agitation; you turn down a narrow alley, either to the right or to the left, and find yourself in the district… . The pretty bungalows are divided into two lodgings; each is inhabited by a woman, and each consists of two rooms and a kitchenette.”