Editor's pick
Past Life Therapy-The State of the Art
Return to Amalfi
RETURN TO AMALFI The tale of the return of the native son or
daughter to the old home town has often enriched our lives. As
something new for the "return to" and travel genre, Return to Amalfi is
about the return of an improbable native son to the old home town and
region as it exists today-and may, or may not, have existed 300 years
ago. In a rare real life combination of travel, detective, romance,
history, "ghost," and scientific adventure story, the author and his
wife and partner, the internationally known writer of The Chalice and
the Blade, Riane Eisler, explore the Amalfi coast in this second book
for the Benjamin Franklin Press publication of a six book Entertainment
and Humor cycle by award-winning author David Loye. The story begins
in one of America's most popular travel destinations, the Monterey
Peninsula and the tiny town of Carmel-by-the-Sea, then moves to Europe,
Rome, and down through Campania to an even more popular attraction, the
enchantment of Amalfi, Ravello, and the sparkling string of towns and
villages from Positano to Sorrento along the Amalfi coast. Driving the
adventure is the baffling mystery of the increasing popularity of what
is known as past life regression work. In this case, it is the question
of whether or not Loye, a psychologist and evolutionary systems
scientist, might actually have also lived 300 years ago as a spice
merchant in late Renaissance Amalfi. Humorous, absorbing,
information-packed, at times moving, this becomes for the Amalfi coast a
portrait akin to travel guru Bill Bryson's portryal of Australia in In
a Sunburnt Country or America's Appalachian trail in A Walk in the
Woods. The look and feel of the magical Amalfi coast, little stories of
the place, tips on lodging and dining here and in Rome, provide a hefty
serving of the basic fare and abiding appeal of the travel book genre.
But with its probe into the lost history of late Renaissance Amalfi,
the book uncovers startling new dimensions of adventure, romance, and
enduring meaning. An amazing connection to both the America of
Washington, Franklin, Jefferson and other founders and the earlier
"partnership" era of gender equality peace and gender equality that
Eisler writes of in The Chalice and the Blade and other books emerges.
The book includes an invaluable guide to the rich history-laden
architecture of the Amalfi coast, ranging from Roman, Byzantine, and
Gothic to Baroque and Romanesque. It is, in short, a book for readers
who want to go in mind or in person to Amalfi, Ravello, Positano, or
the rest of the wonder of the Amalfi coast. As a companion to their
joint biography 3,000 Years of Love, it is also a book for the reader
who via the return of Loye and Eisler to Amalfi may find an evocation of
the puzzle and mystery of their own life.








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