God Book

by Arlene Corwin


Formats

Softcover
£12.95
Softcover
£12.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 27/09/2014

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 162
ISBN : 9781499062854

About the Book

Arlene Corwin believes in God – calls herself ‘God centered’. What does that mean? A first cause embodying all realities: reality in a nutshell in which all opposites resolve, God – one energy, conscious, streaming light, ending in light, soundless, without gender, absolute (all else being relative). It is ‘the only quest worth the thinking about’, the devoting to’. God doesn’t do. God doesn’t have to. Still, there’s doing done; endless forming, endless creating, for which there is nature. God Book is a collection of reflections, analyses, insights, small revelations. Ms Corwin: “God Book is written about the most mesmerizing, engrossing non-thing ever: the many aspects of a subject irresistible and endlessly interesting.” Arlene Corwin was born in Brooklyn, New York, November 8, 1934. A graduate of New York’s High School of Music & Art and Hofstra University, she is a professional jazz singer/pianist and author of 12 previous books. Her writing desk looks out on deer, lingon- and blueberry bushes, pine, fir, birch and one struggling oak. The living room is meters from the lake Stora Härsjön (pronounced hairsheun); the kitchen sees feeding birds, forest mice, squirrels, an old stone wall, boulders in the garden left there when the Ice Age retreated 10.000 years ago and, to make the wild civilized, flowers.


About the Author

Arlene Corwin was born in Brooklyn, New York November 8, 1934. A graduate of New York’s High School of Music & Art and Hofstra University she is a professional jazz singer/pianist and author of 11 previous books. Corwin has lived in Sweden since 1984, teaching yoga and still performing. Her writing desk looks out on deer, lingonberry and blueberry bushes, pine, fir and birch; the living room onto the lake Stora Härsjsön (pronounced hairsheun,); the kitchen onto the feeding birds, forest mice and squirrels, an old stone wall, boulders in the garden left there when the Ice Age retreated, and, to make the wild civilized, flowers.