Advertisement

Faster previews. Personalized experience. Get started with a FREE account.
The Boy Who Followed His Father into Auschwitz

The Boy Who Followed His Father into Auschwitz

by Jeremy Dronfield
0 Pages · 2015 · 2.4 MB · 22 Downloads · New!
" Happiness doesn't result from what we get, but from what we give. ” ― Ben Carson
A History of God
by Karen Armstrong
496 Pages · 2015 · 2 MB · 20 Downloads · New!
“A History of God: A 4,000 Year Quest of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam” is an informative book that gives us very beautiful details about the biggest wild goose chase in history, the quest of God. Karen Armstrong, a British journalist is the author of many other religious books and was a former nun and she served as a religious mentor at the University of Boston. She is also the recipient of the TED prize and worked on the TED charter with many. She is also the recipient of many other international awards for intercultural understanding. Through this author gives us an insight into the quest if God from the ages of Abraham to the present. She tells us about revolutions into an idea that was once unknown.  It is an informative, awakening, and enlightening book for someone who is in a quest of God. This is not good for those who have stubborn ideas for religion and is the best one for those who are ready to change their ideas in the light of knowledge. In short, this is an admirable and impressive synthesis that will give satisfaction and enlightenment to thousands of lay leaders.
Yes to Life
by Viktor E. Frankl
136 Pages · 2015 · 4 MB · 12 Downloads · New!
The “Yes to Life: In Spite of Everything” is a history book which reveals about Frankl. Viktor E. Frankl is the author of this book. Viktor was a professor of neurology and psychiatry at the University of Vienna Medical School until his death in 1997. He received the degrees of Doctor of Medical and Doctor Philosophy from the University of Vienna. Yes to Life was published in the 1940s, after Frankl was released from a Nazi camp. In this book, you will know about three of Frankl’s lectures, such as, on the meaning and value of life, on the meaning and value of life II, Experimentum Crucis. All these lecture focus on suicide, forced annihilation, and concentration camps respectively. These lectures don’t add to the power of his major literary opus. They are remarkable for their timing and location, and they address issues of hope, desperation, and cruelty. Yes to Life is personable and consistently engaging. Once somebody starts reading this book, it is very tough to leave it without finishing, every page keeps users on the edge of the seat. To sum it up, Viktor E. Frankl is an abundant book for gaining perspective in the midst of a pandemic.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement