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Project Camelot General Discussion Reactions, feedback and suggestions on interviews, current events and experiences. |
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#1 |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Northwoods
Posts: 151
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I will start this with saying when I write I think I am making a point. I hit the post key and when a few days later I check back I get the feel of those who I have got mixed up. As my writing can mix up anyone.
So this post is on a method of writing that I have heard about all my life. After reading many books I am sure the ones that "George Green" has wrote are done in the same way as many others who I cannot begin to write about. However. I would have to say that one author who was on the top 10 of best sellers for months at a time for many of her books is well worth reading. Taylor Caldwell..... She goes as far back in history as the breaking up of Alantais. As far forward as a book on the letter exchange between the light and dark force. In between her books addressed Luke, Saul/Paul, the times of Greece. Early life in the U.S. and most of all she covers the whole "banking system" and how the personal travel (by first trains then autos) changed our world. One book was made into a 3 DVD on Netflex which I feel should be a required class for anyone who thinks they know whats going on. (when the book was on the top ten many said it was the fact story of the Kennedy family) May those of you who have Net Flex service ask to see it. The Captains and Kings is the title. Please understand the person who wrote this wants to help in any way I can. Sharing of the above was something I hope will help guild you in understanding. Remember we cannot give up, our life is a gift. We are here at this point of this place in this TIME for a reason. |
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#2 |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Minnesota
Posts: 2,482
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sounds very interesting. Yes, I know others who write that way.
They tell me they stop what they are doing when the urge comes through to write. I have some small books of poems from a friend in Canada and most of them deal with angels. All of them came to her that way and they are a so beautiful |
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#3 | |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Northwoods
Posts: 151
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Saturday Review Syndicat "The best work of Taylor Caldwell" Roman past blaszes anew in mighty story of the republic he fough to save. This one is a paperback which states 3 months on the New York Times Best Seller List. What really got me about this author was the roman Catholic Church at one point contacted her publisher as they wanted to know just when she had been in "their" libiary? Seems things she wrote in Great Lion of God may have "hit home"... She was one great talent when writing... As I have stated before not my area of being understood. |
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#4 |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Minnesota
Posts: 2,482
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OH SO COOL NOW I KNOW I AM GOING TO GET THAT BOOK
LOVE IT ! hehe- when was she in their library ![]() and on netflick that is very much appreciated. I am going to check into that tonight Last edited by mntruthseeker; 09-08-2009 at 02:04 AM. |
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#5 | |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Northwoods
Posts: 151
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I did a few hours or maybe more here at the computer tonight doing some search site readings about her. http://www.trivia-library.com/b/hist...ell-part-2.htm I had read this book (Taylor Caldwell in The Search for a Soul by Jess Stearn) while waiting for the book she wrote first which was not put in print until later in her life. Jess Stearn was an author who I learned long ago some very good mind things from. This work by Jess Stearn on Taylor Caldwell was GREAT!! The man Jess Stearn helped her put that first book Romance of Atlantis. LINK http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romance_of_Atlantis But of ALL the things I learned this one site is OVER the TOP. http://foia.fbi.gov/foiaindex/tcaldwell.htm So..... I see there are well over 100 persons on the site. In hopes that one or more of you can glean some truth from this wonderful Author I will hit send and hope this helps more than one person learn of the history of human kind. My week-end is at the last hours and I have much to get done in the next 3 days. |
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#6 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
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This is quite fascinating for me: automatic drawing, automatic writing. Funny, too, that a Taylor Caldwell book was a turnaround for me in my teens.
(The Pericles one, don't remember the name.) ![]() |
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#7 |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Lunar Base II
Posts: 3,093
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So this is what you are interested in? No peppermint needed?
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#8 |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 2,375
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The interesting thing about automatic writing IMO is hand writing. I just do my thing with notes, thoughts, mind burps, errand lists, work-related reminders, research ideas, work, cards ... whatever.
When I look at my own handwriting on all the (mind) tasks, when/if I do, it's like holy f- that 't' is my dad's 't' there! Or Aw that must have been special I went calligraphy on that one, like my grade 3 teacher will be checking it (she's dead). Then I might see someone's P or Q on paper somewhere and incorporate it, 'cause I like it, or after a hundredth person has told me oh I thought it was an h, I change my h to a legible h. It's very fluid. In the course of a day, all the life influences are here with me. It's useful though, because the type of handwriting jogs me back to the state of mind, if I need to check. Maybe I was scared, super happy, on rote mode, ... It's emotional IMO and great for inner reflection, like... jeezuz what's going on in there! Mostly, I don't have the time and/or don't care. Non-dominant hand experimental (my left) journals are yet another story. Even keyboarding is interesting. We use both hands to type, and maybe this has something to do with our left-right mind 'bridges' evolving into something different now. As is, illiteracy. Illiterate cultures are more communal and/or agrarian. |
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#9 | |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: back in Minnesota
Posts: 500
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