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This book is a combination of two of my books in one: the complete "Capricorn & Cancer", and "Traveling to a New America"
Eizabeth and I are together still, reaching out across America on a journey to spark a national dialogue about America, and
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During the unparalleled covid pandemic of 2020, author James HIlgendorf and his wife Elizabeth faced the second year of battling Elizabeth's pancreatic cancer. This was during the 50th year of their marriage.
Their story is told, going back
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In "Traveling to a New America", author James Hilgendorf draws upon selections from his own books, poems, blogs, and articles, to create a pastiche of a new America - one that even now, amid all the division, anger, and loss of hope we are experienc
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From the book:
"Every great civilization has had its own myth, a cosmic story of how we fit into the universe, a divine story of who we are and where we came from.
"Now all the old myths have crumbled to dust.
"What we crave is a new consciousness
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"Life & Death: A Buddhist Perspective" provides a wide-ranging overview of Buddhist insights into life and death, including correlations with science, psychology, and near-death experiences research.
The author draws on many sources - from writers
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Out of all the stars and galaxies in the universe, you are here upon this Earth to bring forth your greatest self and realize your dreams. Not somewhere else, not after you die, but here and now.
Believe in yourself! Your growth, your self-expre
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A Handbook of encouragement and inspiration for the youth of America and the world today. Short insightful and inspirational writings from the author, combined with quotes of famous international figures, provide a roadmap of hope for the youth of
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"The Buddha and The Dream of America" is another of James Hilgendorf's books aimed at revealing a new vision of America - a vision encompassing everything that has transpired in the past, yet transfigured now - voices, dreams, peoples, the Dream that
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The Title "Poems of Death" comes from a passage in Walt Whitman's "Democratic Vistas, in which he wrote:
"In the future of these States, must arise poets immenser far, and make great poems of death."
Whitman was actually referring not to death its
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Sometime ago, I read a report of a young ten-or-eleven year old boy, who, after being exposed to continuing newspaper and television reports about the fighting going on all over the Middle East, involving Christians, Muslims and Jews, remarked:
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Time runs down the face of the clock, blurring the actual moment where we play our part, unhampered by seconds or minutes or hours, poised upon the turning point of forever. It is here that we become all that we can dream or be.
A book of poems and