Sonoma, California
-
Sometimes you can judge a book by its cover. The new edition of my book Dreamgates has a beautiful cover, designed by Tracy Cunningham, that makes you want to step inside it. Flying to California this week to talk about Dreamgates at a series of fine independent bookstores that are bravely weathering current conditions - Book Passage in Corte Madera, Readers Books in Sonoma, Copperfields in Sebastopol - I saw the cover work its magic.
Like all well-trained authors, I had a copy of my new book with me along with my in-flight reading. A young woman - an editorial assistant in her 20s - sitting next to me on the first flight caught sight of the gorgeous cover and asked if she could have a look at it. She went straight to the last pages of Dreamgates, where I tell the story of a weave of dreams and synchronicity that guided me on how to publish my first book on dreaming (Conscious Dreaming) and led me, a year after a crucial guiding dream, to a scene in the Embarcadero cinema in San Francisco where that dream unfolded, in ordinary reality, in front of my eyes. My rowmate exclaimed, shiny-eyed, "I want to live like this." She proceeded to devour as much of the book as she could before we landed.
On the second flight (Chicago-Oakland) my rowmate was a feisty lady aged 75 who's lived for 20 years in Carmel, California. She, too, asked to see the book with the gorgeous cover. She opened it at random to a section that explores the idea that we can "design a home in the afterlife". This didn't faze her one bit. "I've put all this time and effort into making myself a perfect home in Carmel," she said. "I'm 75 and I guess it may be time for me to start looking seriously into real estate options on the Other Side." She leafed through a section of Dreamgates about visiting our departed loved ones in their present environments, not only to have timely and helpful communication, but to gain first-hand knowledge of conditions in the afterlife. She told me, "I'd love to see what my husband's been up to since he died thirteen years ago. You mean this book can teach me how to do that?" I showed her the section in Dreamgates that contains simple and practical instructions for making a conscious dream journey to meet a loved one on the Other Side. She announced she would get the book and give this a try. She added, patting the book, "I think I want to die like this."
I felt charmed and blessed that in chance encounters on two planes on launch day, Dreamgates was judged a good book to live - or die - by. That seemed to cover a lot.
6 comments:
Thought I'd check your blog, and found this lovely post. It feels like a priming of the pump for tonight's event and this weekend's workshop.
Looking forward to it!
Hi Robert, The cover of a book is often what sells it to me. Many times I've purchased books I've never before heard of simply because their covers drew me, in sometimes mysterious ways. I've rarely regretted it. This lovely new Dream Gates cover intrigues and invites.
It is indeed a beautiful cover, Robert, with an excellent Tree Gate to take us on imaginative journeys. Dreamgates was the first of your books that I read, and I always associate it with a bus trip to Halifax.
I think the subtitle was what drew my attention when I picked up this book that day, and the original illustration of the open window with doves flying into a brilliant sky well suited the idea of exploring soul, imagination and the afterlife.
I think this is my favourite of all your books, still, Robert, regardless of cover. My copy is well worn, underlined, and suntanned. Thank you for bringing me into this world of dream.
I'll echo Alice -- thanks for bringing the dreamer in me "out from under the covers". Thanks also for the early "cover-age" of this new edition.
Nancy
Stephanie - You are right. The twinned chance encounters on the planes did seem like wonderful pump-priming for what has followed. Thanks so much for hosting me at Copperfields, a super bookshop where we drew such a passionate and literate crowd, and for helping to create such a nurturing space for a weekend adventure where we are traveling deep into multiidimensional reality and rediscovering how personal dream images can opend portals into the Dreamtime.
Diana, Alice, Nancy - Thanks for your enthusiasm for the dreaming tree that invites readers to enter the new world of DREAMGATES. It's especially appropriate since I often open the depth workshops by helping participants to find a personal Tree of Vision that can use in various ways: to find animal guardians and ancestral connections; to fold space and time to bring knowledge beyond ordinary sources from a distance; to ascend to communication with a teacher on a higher plane; or simly to relax into the dream of te heartwood and find roots and gronding in the good Earth.
Post a Comment