God's Autobiography
by Jerold Ross
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Pub Date 18 Apr 2023 | Archive Date 4 Sep 2023
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Description
Opinions about the Not-So-Supreme Court, Women's Rights, Belief, LGBTQ, Philosophic discussions, and Prayer
It is important for the readers of this book to realize and understand that sources regarding religion, events and opinions are just basic information, opinions about a subject, or simply the Bible, Book, and verse. It is not to be considered the last word on the subject. The book is intended as food for thought. This not a text book. There are no right or wrong opinions. They are what they are. The subjects are open to the opinion of the reader.
Available Editions
ISBN | 9798391906551 |
PRICE | US$4.95 (USD) |
PAGES | 298 |
Links
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
I read this book as a pre-release e-book obtained through NetGalley, provided by the publisher.
I found this book to tell a delightfully original story depicting God as a “regular guy” character, who even takes on a “regular guy” name. I enjoyed the puns and double-entendres throughout the book. One of the characters in the book is a fictionalized version the author himself – who loves to play with words. Several times the author references one of his own previous books, with a picture of that book included.
There are descriptions of places and things, with pictures of artwork or photographs of actual places. Some of the places that are within “God’s realm” – not the “Heaven” on the 100th floor of a skyscraper, are real places on earth – which have photographs. I give the author some extra points when referring to actual organizations in non-complimentary ways, but rather than naming them describes what they are. God opines about them, especially about getting news or religious beliefs from a single source. This might not age well as organizations and media in the US may change – I think of how this could be described to a young person reading this 50 years from now. Yet, the story is timeless.
God has a staff of people in a corporate-like hierarchy who actually "do" most things or create them. It was fun getting to "sit in" on just how various lifeforms are created, and categorized.
There is a mystery of how or where two of the protagonists previously met. The mystery is brought to light at the end, and is another upbeat story wrapped around the main story