Book Recommendation: The Third Millennium; Living in the Posthistoric World

Type: Book Reference
ITC EVP Books Bibliography Spirit Communication

Title: The Third Millennium; Living in the Posthistoric World Author: Carey Year: 1995 Description: In this mesmerizing guide to life in the next era, Carey provides the tools for a fuller perception of reality--with dynamic implications for our individual lives and the communal life of the planet. Amazon Customer Review: Nearly 6 years ago a cyber friend recommended that I read, "The Third Millennium: Living in the Post historic World" by Ken Carey. I purchased it and placed it in my ever-growing pile of books to read. Last week, for some reason, I picked it out of the stack and finished it today. Although I wish I would have read it sooner, I am so glad that I took author Moonstone Star White's advice and read this book. I have not read a more compelling wisdom book since, "The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran." The author does not know why he was chosen, but he claims to have received some kind of "telepathic awareness" transmissions from all knowing celestial entities first on the morning of January 6, 1979 and again between the years of 1987 and 1989 giving life to this text--a compelling spiritual, beautifully poetic voice of the prophecy of a great awakening that will positively change life and reality as we know it--revealing the ultimate human purpose to the masses in this decade. This book is not for everyone. While the author's use of similes, analogies, metaphors, language, perspective and voice may paint a marvelous word picture destined to

be a classic, others may find the message impertinent, esoteric or even sacrilegious. Keeping an open mind, I enjoyed the intelligent and poetic discourse. I found myself taking notes, pausing to reread, pondering, and questioning how these intriguing messages may alter my thoughts in the future. I will keep this book handy for a long time and intend to read it time and again. I am surprised that this book did not make best seller lists. I found it a compelling and haunting read and recommend it to open-minded people of all ages who have the patience to absorb this rare find.