Searching for My Wives
William Bostock
Read by William Bostock
Imagine how it all began, this marvelous, long journey of Humanity. Some souls work for peace and happiness. Others, though, despoil, degrade, and kill. This is a novel of past lives, reincarnation, and our occult history. Not many protohumans were alive, one and one-half million years ago, but all of us had souls, and souls persist, and there are souls which lived in hominids in Chesowanja, eastern Africa who have lived among us almost to the present day.
Shimmer loves his wives, Sita and Ahalya, and tries to share sweet lives with them, but the trickster Murk, intent on dragging Mankind down, drives black souls to attack the ones who love.
Come along as Shimmer leads migrations. Relive the waning of the Great Ice Age and the planetwide disaster. And remember how Old Kingdom Egypt travelled through a pleat in time to stabilize and rule the riverplains of northern India. Re-experience Murk's dark campaign to undermine that peaceful land, and once again respond to Shimmer and Old Shiver's call to arms and meet the enemy between two rivers at fabled Kurukshetra.
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Chapters
Episode 1. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 2. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 3. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 4. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 5. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 6. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 7. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 8. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 9. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 10. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 11. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 12. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 13. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 14. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 15. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 16. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 17. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 18. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 19. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 20. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 21. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 22. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 23. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 24. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 25. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 26. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 27. | Read by William Bostock | |
Episode 28. | Read by William Bostock |
Reviews
By: Barry Bounous
A book I want to like. Have to be in the right mood and be able to really concentrate. Has evocative images and concepts. Voice is smoothly delivered. It is, however, easy to get a little lost. The print version may be a better choice. Am hanging in for the ...
By: William Bostock
Thanks for your comment, Barry. Were you one of the "early adopters"? I have been surprized at how very few people have cancelled their subscriptions to the book. The text does have the advantage of being linear --- this happens, then that happens, without flashbacks --- but by its nature ...
By: Rhonda
A Methodically Detailed Journey Across Primordial Time This is a great book to curl up with at bedtime. The prose evokes vivid, panoramic images of the many lifetimes of Shimmer, Sita, Ahalya, and Old Shiver. A conical if you will, of their fight for humanities humanness against Murk and his ...
By: Grizzly Smith
I'm listening to Episode 20 right now. I notice your files don't have any cover art. Doesn't keep me from listening, of course. Very well written and well read. "Searching for my Wives" feels like one of those books that, years from now, people will still talk about, and share, ...
By: William Bostock
Grizzly -- Thank you very much for the approving comment. It means a lot to hear that "Searching for My Wives" found another interested listener/reader. (Don't know what to say about that cover art; the thumbnail was popped into each file, but things happen ...) I like your choice of ...
By: ron martinetti
Is this the same Bill Bostock who wrote The Way We Were? One of my late mother's favorite books. Great writer.
By: smith
didn't make it through the first chapter the "explict and graphic" warning at the beginning is well deserved
By: William Bostock
Thank you for your appreciative comment, Rhonda. I am very happy that the book spoke to you.