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To Heaven and Back
- A Doctor's Extraordinary Account of Her Death, Heaven, Angels, and Life Again: A True Story
- By: Mary C. Neal MD
- Narrated by: Rebecca Lowman
- Length: 4 hrs and 42 mins
- Unabridged
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In 1999 in the Los Rios region of southern Chile, orthopedic surgeon, devoted wife, and loving mother Dr. Mary Neal drowned in a kayak accident. While cascading down a waterfall, her kayak became pinned at the bottom and she was immediately and completely submerged. Despite the rescue efforts of her companions, Mary was underwater for too long, and as a result, died. To Heaven and Back is Mary’s remarkable story of her life’s spiritual journey and what happened as she moved from life to death to eternal life, and back again.
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Christian witness for the most part
- By Richard D. Shewman on 08-10-12
- To Heaven and Back
- A Doctor's Extraordinary Account of Her Death, Heaven, Angels, and Life Again: A True Story
- By: Mary C. Neal MD
- Narrated by: Rebecca Lowman
Good Read
Reviewed: 11-26-24
To heaven and back was a very interesting read about a doctor that went on a canoeing trip kayaking trip and had an accident that nearly killed her. in the process of the accident, she says she died and went to heaven and explained, roughly what she saw in heaven, but it wasn’t clear enough that you could make a good picture of it. She claims to have seen God, but in the same turn, she said that she didn’t see Jesus. This book was really just another account of a near death experience where somebody to have seen God or Jesus when they were in a medical state that could’ve been life ending. She also after this experienced death of her son, and she kind of explained how her experience helped her through the death of her son. The book was worth reading. It was interesting wasn’t really earth shattering or anything, but it was a good read.
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Proof of Heaven
- A Neurosurgeon's Journey into the Afterlife
- By: Eben Alexander
- Narrated by: Eben Alexander
- Length: 6 hrs and 27 mins
- Unabridged
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Thousands of people have had near-death experiences, but scientists have argued that they are impossible. Dr. Eben Alexander was one of those scientists. Neurosurgeon Alexander knew that NDEs feel real, but are simply fantasies produced by brains under extreme stress. Then, Dr. Alexander’s own brain was attacked by a rare illness. The part of the brain that controls thought and emotion shut down completely. For seven days he lay in a coma. Then Alexander’s eyes popped open. He had come back. Alexander’s recovery is a medical miracle. But the real miracle of his story lies elsewhere.
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Compelling
- By Kelly on 10-27-12
- Proof of Heaven
- A Neurosurgeon's Journey into the Afterlife
- By: Eben Alexander
- Narrated by: Eben Alexander
Not Sure if worth reading
Reviewed: 11-01-24
This book was told from a neurologist standpoint of how he saw his near death experience. It seemed mainly to talk about the scientific part of it and less about what he experienced and what he experienced seem to be somewhat confusing. He seems to be more interested in the scientific aspect of how to or how not to explain and why the explanations weren’t viable through science. His experience did differ from other people that have had your death experiences, not saying that his experience wasn’t genuine, but just different. I would say in a few books that I’ve read so far on the subject that this one was the least impressive of the three I don’t know if I’d say this is a must read or skip.
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The Indignities of Being a Woman
- By: Merrill Markoe, Megan Koester
- Length: 8 hrs and 5 mins
- Unabridged
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The Indignities of Being a Woman candidly traces the history of womanhood and investigates how much things have really changed for womankind. By carefully x-raying areas such as body image, marriage, mental illness, fashion, and politics, this audiobook examines what it was like to be a woman in the past versus what it’s like now, when women are constantly told equality between the sexes exists but reality proves otherwise.
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Insert Political Joke Here
- By Adam on 02-16-19
Horrible bias view
Reviewed: 10-06-24
First off, I’d like to start a saying that the authors seemed to be way too obsessed with Trump bashing in this book for me to actually take what they said very seriously. They come across as radical feminist. They come across as men haters. Their prognosis of the historic view and treatment of women, although in many cases might be highly accurate, but is exaggerated with their liberal ideology. The varying fluctuations of preferred society weight of women, which they definitely acknowledge as a varying target based on era, is misrepresented ideology based on gender when these standards are established for both genders by society. Men currently are under just as much social pressure to meet standards as women are. I could speak to all the fallacies of the authors mind set, but its just not worth it. The book is a definite skip.
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Heaven Is for Real
- A Little Boy's Astounding Story of His Trip to Heaven and Back
- By: Todd Burpo, Lynn Vincent
- Narrated by: Stu Gray
- Length: 5 hrs and 6 mins
- Unabridged
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When four-year-old Colton Burpo emerges from life-saving surgery with remarkable stories of his visit to heaven, his family doesn’t know what to believe. Heaven Is for Real details what Colton saw and his family’s journey towards accepting their young son had visited the afterlife.
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Giving believers more inspiration
- By MISSCHRISTY on 10-15-17
- Heaven Is for Real
- A Little Boy's Astounding Story of His Trip to Heaven and Back
- By: Todd Burpo, Lynn Vincent
- Narrated by: Stu Gray
Real or fiction, which was the book?
Reviewed: 09-13-24
This story started out very slow, boring with a big portion of the first part of the story Just about the hospital part of Colton’s sickness and the illness and the family. They were really didn’t add much in my opinion to the story it really in my opinion, being as long as it was took away from the story.. on top of that, the writing was very subpar was not very good. It was very childlike in his delivery. It almost seem like there was not much editing, which wasn’t much fluency in the writing that it was just a long drawn out process of what was being said at the beginning of the book.. even though the writing was bad, the book become a little bit more interesting because it was more of a description of what Colton saw while he was being in heaven or in heaven, whichever you want to believe. I really had a hard time believing what I was hearing Baystone. His parents seem to be very immature in the sense that a lot of things that they allowed their child to do in the early stages of life after the experience were not very disciplined going to funerals and saying oh is he going to heaven? Is he going to heaven? Oh I hope he’s going to heaven and stuff like that. The parents should have, spank butt for making comments like that family of deceased people. It is unexcused usable in my opinion, and there were multiple episodes of that type of behavior.. The story may be real it may be a dream. It may be everything like that, but it just come across to me is not being a real authentic story, but not being in the place of seeing what was there and not experiencing that I can’t really say one way or the other I can just say that it was an interesting book, talked about a lot of interesting things and validity and some of things that were said based on what was shared and they did have points within the book itself that would make you think that if that is true and actually would happen then maybe the story is true. I wouldn’t say the book is not worth reading, but I also wouldn’t say that it is overly inspiring neither.
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Death Is but a Dream
- Finding Hope and Meaning at Life's End
- By: Christopher Kerr, Carine Mardorossian
- Narrated by: Fred Sanders
- Length: 7 hrs and 41 mins
- Unabridged
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Christopher Kerr is a hospice doctor. All of his patients die. Yet, he has cared for thousands of patients who, in the face of death, speak of love and grace. Beyond the physical realities of dying are unseen processes that are remarkably life-affirming. Drawing on interviews with over 1,400 patients and more than a decade of quantified data, Dr. Kerr reveals that pre-death dreams and visions are extraordinary occurrences that humanize the dying process.
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OK
- By Oneeye on 03-02-20
- Death Is but a Dream
- Finding Hope and Meaning at Life's End
- By: Christopher Kerr, Carine Mardorossian
- Narrated by: Fred Sanders
Definitely a book that proves that there is an afterlife
Reviewed: 09-05-24
This book came as an find based on circumstance. My mother had been in the hospital suffering from many conditions that brought her to a point where she started experiencing delirium and eventually end of life experiences. My sister shared death visions they should found on the Internet.. I searched and look for similar articles that led me to end of life experiences. in one of them, it led me to this book. by the time that I’d begin reading this book, my mother was already experiencing in the life experiences. I managed to read the first two or three chapters before she passed away, but continued reading the book afterwards really understanding how her experiences were experiences that were noted within this book. I will say that the first three chapters help me understand what was happening with my mother. I wish I had started reading this book earlier to better have seen the whole process and understood it as it was taking place. This book hit on many different end of life experiences. Some that were religious and others that were more connections with deceased relatives and pets. It showed how that non-religious people could have religious end of life experiences. it also showed how young children older adults and young adults could experience the same type of experiences. It definitely expressed a different set of experiences based on what the person needed. Some people needed to be able to close their life out, fixing things that need to be fixed at the end of life. Others had a religious experience and others just found himself among friends. Even though the doctor express that very few of the in life experiences were religious and nature, I believe that he didn’t understand some of the experiences were. Every experience he expressed to me seemed religious in nature. Religious in the terms of God or angels or family members waiting to welcome you into the afterlife.. he could see these things and not understand. The religious connotation in each one of these scenarios is beyond me. however, obtuse his findings were in some areas. The book was excellent in helping someone understand what happens at the end of life and how they transition into the afterlife.
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Hillbilly Elegy
- A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis
- By: J. D. Vance
- Narrated by: J. D. Vance
- Length: 6 hrs and 49 mins
- Unabridged
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Hillbilly Elegy is a passionate and personal analysis of a culture in crisis - that of white working-class Americans. The decline of this group, a demographic of our country that has been slowly disintegrating over 40 years, has been reported on with growing frequency and alarm but has never before been written about as searingly from the inside. J. D. Vance tells the true story of what a social, regional, and class decline feels like when you were born with it hung around your neck.
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In Mamaw's Contradictions Lay Great Wisdom
- By Cynthia on 11-20-16
- Hillbilly Elegy
- A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis
- By: J. D. Vance
- Narrated by: J. D. Vance
A look into JD Vance
Reviewed: 08-14-24
The JD Vance book was an excellent book. No, I may have only rated it three stars, but it was an excellent book. The one thing that I can say is that he kind of went through his life and everything, and it seemed a unique life from the perspective of where he came from and where he went to, at least where he went to at the time of the book in the book really is mainly about his childhood, his mother who was alcoholic and a drug attic, and she kind of moved in and out of being a reliable person that he could roll on, but it also went into his grandparents and how they bring him to the personality became and seeing where he became, and all the obstacles that were in the way Definitely follow the path that not many people from that Kentucky area of Jackson and Ohio where he moved to a later point followed, were not any people that followed the path that he followed into law school EL he talked about you know his his pride as a Appalachian transplant into Ohioabout the people that moved Ohio how they were down because they taught funny they dress funny they acted funny. They weren’t as sophisticated as some of the other people they already talked about. How do you know that the people of Ohio where he moved to they were more of a group, but not a high class system middle middle class and how they look down upon the people that moved there he talked about all the struggles and everything within within the family structure that he dealt with. He talked about how he went to Ohio State and got his degree, and how he went to Yale and got his law degree and how when he finished at Yale, how he decided to take a lawyer position as a clerk with a law firm or judge and how he made that decision based on not moving up in the world and being a congressional lawyer, but how he made that decision based on what he wanted out of life and he wanted to get married have a family and and move forward that way so he didn’t lose him. Focus on exactly what he wanted and he talked about the social networking that was there at Yale that helped him make those decisions and it was one of the law professors that I hope you told him how you know you may not want to go with this judge because he’s hard you know and that’s what causes families to break up and you don’t want that you wanna go with one of the other ones because unless you wanna be a congressional lawyer You don’t really wanna go down that path so overall it was an excellent book. I really enjoyed it learned a lot about JD Vance learned some things that I didn’t expect to learn I he talked about how the national media lied a lot and he talked about oh you know white Republicans, and some of the things that they believe in and some of things they fell into buying into certain things that are said some of the things he talked about was, Obama and Michelle, the president and his wife and how that there were so many lies told about them that a lot of the white Republicans just bought into because they wanted to believe that and he said that people need to think for themselves and not follow everything the media says it was an excellent book and I recommend it is just to get a better understanding of JD Vance.
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Frankenstein: Lost Souls
- By: Dean Koontz
- Narrated by: Christopher Lane
- Length: 8 hrs and 50 mins
- Unabridged
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In Frankenstein: Lost Souls, Dean Koontz puts a singular twist on this classic tale of ambition and science gone wrong, to forge a new legend uniquely suited to our times. It is a story of revenge, redemption, and the thin line that separates human from inhuman.
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Frankenstein Lost Souls
- By Suzanne on 06-30-10
- Frankenstein: Lost Souls
- By: Dean Koontz
- Narrated by: Christopher Lane
A little different twist than the first books
Reviewed: 07-31-24
I have read the first three books in the series and dink Coots did a excellent job in the first three books. I believe that I rated them very highly but moving onto this book in this book started out and I didn’t really see the patterns that were associated with the previous three books exactly I did see some of the social structure in the cloning type structure and it is definitely in the sequence of, a brave new world still with that philosophy carrying into this book it just wasn’t as readily apparent in the beginning. Also definitely as name states so it’s a book about Frankenstein or incorporates. The Frankenstein theory there is a Victor Frankenstein that shows up in this this book and you know he is just as Frankenstein did creating life through cloning or something along those lines, the book then took a turn for it become more of a baseline story outside of the first three books. I’m looking at pieces of developments that a different story with different characters but still incorporated some of the same ideology that the first three books did cover saying this at first was not sure exactly what I thought of the book and as the book progressed and carry to an end, it becomes turn into a book that kind of incorporated a invasion of the body snatchers type to what was going on within the book and still incorporated Frankenstein and a brave New World and by the end of the book I did fill that the book did deserve three solid stars not anything any higher than that and definitely not anything any lower than that, it is a book thatproved to be a book based on The first three books and is a good addition to the series. Hopefully, the fourth book will be just as interesting and have just as many twist as this one seem to have from the first three.
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Devoted
- By: Dean Koontz
- Narrated by: Edoardo Ballerini
- Length: 11 hrs and 24 mins
- Unabridged
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Woody Bookman hasn’t spoken a word in his eleven years of life. Not when his father died in a freak accident. Not when his mother, Megan, tells him she loves him. For Megan, keeping her boy safe and happy is what matters. But Woody believes a monstrous evil was behind his father’s death and now threatens him and his mother. And he’s not alone in his thoughts. An ally unknown to him is listening.
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Descendants of WATCHERS...
- By shelley on 04-01-20
- Devoted
- By: Dean Koontz
- Narrated by: Edoardo Ballerini
Doggy bonds
Reviewed: 07-20-24
Devoted was a different type book that had a unique concept. As an animal lover book, it carried a lot of weight for the reader using an somewhat different perspective on the canine and human bond. It expanded on it in a telekinetic way. Overall, the book was good, but never fully ingratiated the story. Language of the book, smooth read, but very simplistic lack that touch of sophistication through the wordsmithing of the language. The book called the good had the potential to be great, but it never seem to hit that level. There were times that the book didn’t hold your attention very well another times with the new concept of the bond between the two seem to hold attention very well.. overall it was definitely a book worth reading for entertainment.
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American Buffalo
- In Search of a Lost Icon
- By: Steven Rinella
- Narrated by: Patrick G. Lawlor
- Length: 8 hrs and 54 mins
- Unabridged
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Steven Rinella won a lottery to hunt for a wild buffalo in the Alaskan wilderness. One of only four hunters that year who succeeded in killing a buffalo, he carried the carcass down a snow-covered mountainside and floated it four miles down a white-water canyon while being trailed by grizzly bears and suffering from hypothermia. Rinella found himself contemplating his own place among the 14,000 years' worth of buffalo hunters in North America and the place of the buffalo in the American consciousness.
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Driving West
- By D. hanson on 07-30-09
- American Buffalo
- In Search of a Lost Icon
- By: Steven Rinella
- Narrated by: Patrick G. Lawlor
A buffalo story
Reviewed: 07-06-24
The American Buffalo was very interesting book not exactly what I was thinking that it was gonna be. It was actually a book about the American Buffalo, although I thought that it was going to be from the perspective of Indians, but it was more about Buffalo in general. It opened up with the Buffalo nickel and the buffalo, which was called Black Diamond. That was the Buffalo that was used as the image of the buffalo on the nickel and talked about how it’s head hung over a meat slaughter place for a long time after they slaughtered Black Diamond, ventured into the make up in history or genealogy of the buffalo and the different types of buffalo that exist in the difference between the Buffalo and the bison and how the American Buffalo was to be an ox at one point in time and that’s how it came up with the bison name but it also looked back at the Buffalo in prehistoric times like the dinosaurs roamed and talked about Buffalo that were as big as elephants. He was a Buffalo scientist who studied the Buffalo and knew lots of details about the Buffalo like details on their eating habits, hurting habits, muscles teeth, and other bodily things that only buffalo scientist would know, but he was also a hunter and he talked about going into Alaska to hunt a Buffalo with a permit. He talked about when he actually killed the Buffalo and he talked about it being a trophy, the buffalo skin and compared it to the Indian buffalo skin, but he talked about different things that the Buffalo was used for like buffalo meal, which was added into different things like pottery, Indian roofs, and other essential items. He also talked about how Buffalo died from drowning and how the other buffalo would create a path across the bones. Overall it was very interesting book and definitely well worth reading.
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The World of the Ancient Maya
- 2nd Edition
- By: John S. Henderson
- Narrated by: Nadia May
- Length: 10 hrs and 34 mins
- Unabridged
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In this comprehensive survey, updated for this new edition, Henderson explores the entire Maya cultural tradition, from the earliest traces of settlement through the period of the Spanish conquest in the 16th century. His wide-ranging account treats diverse aspects of the Maya world, from religion and philosophy to the environments of the various Maya peoples, using deciphered Maya texts to reconstruct the ancient societies.
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Not for the layman
- By Jim on 02-15-07
- The World of the Ancient Maya
- 2nd Edition
- By: John S. Henderson
- Narrated by: Nadia May
History Book of the Mayans
Reviewed: 07-05-24
The ancient world of the Mayans was definitely an interesting book, but it was not a read for the casual reader that was looking for stories antidotes, and in different things about the Mayans. It was more of a historic book from the level of a college course. There were lots of things that I found out about the Mayans such as their farming, their temples and things like that but overall, it was a very dull book to read, although it did give me a introduction to Mayan society and the things that they did within their society and the different breakdowns of rulers of the Mayan and the cities and geographics and everything and talked about some of their Artwork, but needed pictures to coincide with some of what was written.
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