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In this peculiar, enthralling book, one will find emotions,
adventures, characters, that will torment the reader, if not
leaving one spellbound by its expressiveness. In "Dracula's Ghost,
" you find the legend has more than fictitious elements on the mind
of a certain person with a pronounced inherited trait, and is
haunted by the Ghost of Dracula, and its creator; a most ghastly
unwavering affair.
In "Shadows in the Wild, " the mysterious shadow of a stranger
conjurors up an untapped emotion. In "Sjorfaa! Sjorfaa!" you become
enmeshed in an Arctic adventure. In "Death in the Dust, " you end
up at a bullfight, with a character unforgettable. In "The Plane
from Iquitos, " you are taken into an adventure in the Amazon. In
"The Diamond Caddo Estate, " dreams do come true, at a price. In
the "Feathered Serpent, " a quest is sought, and in "The Quiet of
Quiahuiztlan, " the quiet is short lived.
This is a sensitive book, rich in understanding and common sense.
It will put the reader in touch with what it is like to be an
addictive person, and what must be done to bring the person back
from being an outcast. As the author explains in a respectful way,
how the afflicted feels, he includes, biological, psychosocial, and
family damage caused by the chemicals being used. His effect is to
created ways to deal with addiction, along with new possibilities.
This book can be helpful to all who are involved in the world of
addiction; it is straight forward.
Says the author: This story will bring you deep into it: make you
live it... it transcends Evolution and Creationism to form a unique
relationship with humanity. Beyond the myths of this world, resides
pieces of truth, thus, forming this story, where boundaries are
marked by no one. The author conjures up a gallant
saga--science-fiction: where the 'Garden of Eve, ' is in decay, and
the inhabitants of the world are forming a New World Order. From
the book, 'Death on Demand, ' by Mr. Siluk]: says author E.J.
Soltermann--Healing from Terrorism, Fear and Global War, The Dead
Vault: A gripping tale that sucks you deep through human emotions
and spits you out at the end as something better. In a like manner,
After Eve, holds the same truths. Mr. Siluk, being a world
traveler, a lover of the mysteries around the world, has visited
many World Heritage Sites; recently, he visited the most remote
island in the world, 'Easter Island, ' where Kevin Costner made his
movie: Rapa Nui, there he stands, the author, with Charlie Love,
Geologist, Archeologist; and Grant McColl, Anthropologist, June,
2002. The author felt this would be a most befitting picture for
such an intriguing sto
"Perhaps it's Love, " the original element, which gives this book
its name, concerns four young adults that play a vital role to
follow their hearts; sometimes without adequate preparation, or the
appropriate equipment as a test of the will. This of course, nearly
crushes each person's spirit. In one-way or another, each youth is
linked to each other (ages between 18 and 21). The novel is
primarily concerned with choices in love, in some cases a manifesto
about its dangers. At the end it, it must be said, nothing was
tolerable but the best. No one was without sin.
Four youths [l967-68], while being in the process of growth get
stirred up quite a lot, some even lost in the commotion of events,
while feelings become nourished and intensified, all aching for
love, in their own way. A lesson might well be learned if they can
only harness their crying hearts; but first unhappiness has to be
conquered (part of the theme and plot). The story has a shy-charm
to it, a quick gaiety, and objective tenderness. It is dramatic; it
has an exploring inner mind. Many parts of this book are based on
actual events, transformed into historical fiction.
With the poetic skill of Cesar Vallejo, and handiness of Ricardo
Palma, Siluk produces a Peruvian background in a most favorable
way. His vantage point, like the poet Par Lagerkvist, is rich with
humanism. Thus, the Laureate Poet, Dennis Siluk (awarded the title
of the most favored writer for the Eldritch Dark Magazine, 2004
readership of some 2.2-million and l982, Pulitzer Entry): his
vantage point centers on the exploration and social identity of
Peruvianism, for the most part; along with a twelve part poem on
Vietnam. In great poets we often find calmness and undisturbed
beauty, a serenity and clarity. says acclaimed international poet
Robert Bly, whom the author has had some correspondence with, and
has met, and respects ...says Mr. Siluk, Some poetry comes from our
imagination and passion, like dreams that need daylight for them to
be opened up; as did the Andes, Mantaro Valley, along with Huancayo
and Lima, Peru, become the seeds for me in writing this new book,
Spell of the Andes, which opened my imagination and passion up. Mr.
Siluk once told me, First you've heard of it, then you see it, then
it becomes part of you; and this book sure did become part of him.
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