Showing 1–16 of 43 results

  • A Memory of Flight by Elizabeth Beckett

    This story follows the adventures of a young woman called Cansulus in her intergalactic journey to find the source of her own understanding of life on Earth and her role in it. A Memory of Flight introduces a lot of the primary concepts of Elizabeth Beckett’s work to readers. Many of these key spiritual concepts are reiterated and expanded upon in subsequent works by the author. For example: Egypt and the pyramids, the Hathors, avatars, Memnon the Snake God, and Atlantis.

    One of the features of A Memory of Flight is the inclusion of a metaphysical timeline for planet Earth and the existence of the human species.

  • A Winter’s Tale by Mark Helprin

    One winter night, Peter Lake – master mechanic and second-storey man – attempts to rob a fortress-like mansion on the Upper West Side. Though he thinks it is empty, the daughter of the house is home. Thus begins the affair between a middle-aged Irish burglar and Beverly Penn, a young girl dying of consumption. It is a love so powerful that Peter Lake, a simple and uneducated man, will be driven to stop time and bring back the dead.

    See our VFA review here.

  • Call to Purpose by Ken W. Brown

    When humans became human beings, they never suspected evil existed. Then its web of lies closed, and their murder began.

    In a desperate gambit, ancient selves commit everything they have to send the original purpose of human beings forward in time. While their future selves struggle to remember who they are, Shahten uses every lie in his arsenal to sever human from being once and for all.

  • Carry on the Flame: Destiny’s Call by Jodine Turner

    Humanity is in the midst of the greatest crisis in their evolution. Sharay is the one chosen to show the way forward and help humankind move through the fear and dark times of today’s world. Born into a lineage of priestesses in modern-day Glastonbury, England, Sharay’s way is blocked by her jealous Aunt Phoebe, who uses black magic against her to steal her fortune and magical power. When Phoebe commits Sharay to a psychiatric ward and accuses her of murder, Sharay struggles with the temptation to fight Phoebe’s vengeance with her own. Through the ancient Celtic ceremony of Beltaine, Sharay experiences profound sacred union with the Welshman Guethyn, who shows her how to open her heart. But Sharay must learn to transform her hatred for her aunt in order to claim the mystery held deep within her cells that will allow her to fulfill her destiny and prove that the ultimate magic is the power of love.

  • Carry on the Flame: Ultimate Magic by Jodine Turner

    Hunted by the police, stalked by a demonic Tracker conjured by her aunt, and torn from everyone she loves, Sharay struggles with the temptation to fight Phoebe’s dark powers with her own. She must transform her fear and hatred for her aunt in order to uncover the mystery held deep within her cells that will allow her to fulfill her destiny – a secret only she can discover.

  • Cobalt Blue by Peggy Payne

    Burned out from work and a recent breakup, Andie Branson, a 38-year-old commercial artist in a conservative town in the American South, has a shocking and unexpected religious experience, kundalini rising, the physical manifestation of tantric enlightenment.

  • Contact, and Other Impressions by Gerald R. Stanek

    Alex can’t remember where he is going, why he is going there, or with whom he is traveling. Seth can’t forget who he has been. Gloria seems to know what is about to happen. Liz is completely surprised. Joel believes there are complex requirements to get there. Rachel believes it is simple. Some think it’s a dream, for others it’s all a game. We all know there is more to existence than what reaches us through the five senses. We feel it in our guts, our hearts, our bones. We know there is someone, something, or somewhere else we are trying to connect to, but are there forces trying to contact us? These seven stories track the progress of some fellow seekers.

  • Eve: A Novel by Wm. Paul Young

    When a shipping container washes ashore on an island between our world and the next, John the Collector finds a young woman inside—broken, frozen, and barely alive. With the aid of Healers and Scholars, John oversees her recovery and soon discovers that her genetic code connects her to every known race. No one would guess what her survival will mean…

  • Everest Rising by M. D. Kambic

    Geophysicist James Von Kamburg leads a crack team of scientists to the Himalayas to decipher an escalating series of portentous signs: frozen glaciers are melting, plants spawn from rock, and leopards move in herds.

  • Everknight cover

    Everknight: A Heroic Journey of Uncompromising Honor by Stefan Edmunds

    Sir Gawain serves as the most honorable knight at King Arthur’s Round Table, and after an encounter with the mysterious Green Knight, Gawain’s fate becomes intertwined with that of his own honorable death – a destiny he must fight for to the bitter end.

  • First Light by Michelle Frost

    “Forbidden things.” Idrith pointed out grimly, “Things that could be your death warrant.” “All beauty has a price, Castellan, and with all knowledge comes responsibility. The people who deal with my contact know this well and they know the worse price of ignoring it.” “What would that be?” “Emptiness.” Idrith dropped his gaze at last….

  • Giving Voice to Dawn: A Magical Tale of Self-Discovery by L. S. Gribko

    Goaded into action by Mick, Ellie and her quick-witted buddy from work, Neil, become obsessed with cracking the secrets of the dream. They embark on a mystical quest that leads back to the American Civil War and forgotten truths that must be remembered if Ellie is to unravel the mystery of a tragic past that has stolen her joy and muted her voice.

    Part bittersweet fable, part imaginative adventure, part historical romp, Ellie’s story will remind you that it’s never too late to sing your song into a new dawn.

  • God in a Box by Theresa Crater

    Stacey gets a ticket to heaven. But restrictions apply.

  • GOD: DEATH (THE ICON) by Brendan Graham Dempsey

    With growing ecological, economic, and political instability, one wonders how long things can continue as they are. Don’t we seem overdue for some fundamental restructuring of our systems? Our society? Ourselves? What other worlds are possible?

    DEATH is the first installment in the GOD trilogy. It takes as its subject the last myth with any real currency in secular times: The Death of God. What the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche had ominously alluded to, Julian’s first poem chronicles in dramatic detail, enlarging the haunting philosophical myth to 125 pages of industrial war in Heaven.

  • Goddess of the Wild Thing by Paul DeBlassie III

    Winner of the Independent Press Award and the NYC Big Book Award for Visionary Fiction!

    Eve Sanchez, a scholar of esoteric studies, is driven into unreal dimensions of horror and hope as she encounters a seductive and frightening man, criminal lawyer Sam Shear.

    Sam introduces Eve to a supernatural world in which the wicked powers of a surrogate mother’s twisted affection threaten love and life. Struggling to sort through right from wrong, frightened yet determined, Eve nears despair.

    Goddess of the Wild Thing reveals the dramatic tale of one woman’s spiritual journey where metaphysical happenings, unexpected turns of fate, and unseen forces impact her ability to love and be loved.

    In the magical realm of Aztlan del Sur, a mythopoeic land of hidden horrors and guiding spirits, Eve, with three friends and a wise old woman, is caught in an age-old struggle about love—whether bad love is better than no love— and discovers that love is a wild thing.

  • How Roland Rolls by Jim Carrey, Rob Nason (Illustrator)

    HOW ROLAND ROLLS, winner of a 2013 Gelett Burgess Children’s Book Award, is a story about a wave named Roland who’s afraid that, one day, when he hits the beach, his life will be over. But when he gets deep, he’s struck by the notion that he’s not just a wave – he’s the whole big, wide ocean! The story shows humanity’s interconnectedness through the metaphor of a wave in the ocean.

    The book is lavishly illustrated by Rob Nason, who won a Golden Reel award for his work as Art Director on the film Anastasia, as well as an Annie Awards nomination. His work on Thumbelina garnered the Hans Christian Andersen award. His cover for the inspiring grass-roots children’s book, Saltwater Taffy, was nominated as Cover of the Year and was a finalist for the prestigious Benjamin Franklin award.