Jung
wasn't known for writing books for the layperson, but this is one of
the very few he did. A friend got this book for me some time ago
after we had been discussing Jung's work and the influence of the
“collective unconscious” on our modern minds, not to mention
dreams and their meanings (which this book can't avoid discussing).
"Read! Read! Read! And never stop until you discover the knowledge of the Universe." - Marcus Garvey
Magic and Mystery in Tibet - by: Alexandra David-Neel (1932, 2014)
This is one of those rare books that exposes another culture in a way that really opens it up an lets the reader glimpse for themselves what...
-
This is one of those rare books that exposes another culture in a way that really opens it up an lets the reader glimpse for themselves what...
-
"The true story of the Steven Stayner abduction case." I never heard about this case until I saw a documentary about it on 20/2...
-
Another valuable gift from much more than a friend that I must also surrender due to the five-book-limit for BOP prisoners regardless ...