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Blind Savior, False Prophet

Joseph DeMarco

 FormatISBN Price  
This Book is Available Paperback (6x9)9781434391261 $ 9.90  
This Book is Available Dust Jacket Hardcover (6x9)9781438903958 $ 14.90  
About the Book

Joe Kaye was an American poet, philosopher, schoolteacher, and author of 11 books. Born in New York City, Joe taught in New York, Hawaii, and Michigan. In Hawaii, he started writing and by the age of 25 he published his first manuscript. He later moved to Michigan and then to Wisconsin, where he developed a tumor which began to give him delusions. His delusions led him to construct a giant labyrinth on a tropical island. He also had an obsession with looking for a message he believed he had left for himself in a past life, in the form of a poem, song, or story. He went insane with paranoia and believed the karma police were coming to take him away. He also became obsessed with cheating death, practicing a religion called Voodoo Botany, believing it would make him a god. On a late night talk show, he made a prophecy about the extinction of the human race. He was sent to rest at Fennimore Place Institute. The maze was never finished. He died broke and penniless.

 

What most books won’t tell you about the life of Joe Kaye, The False Prophet of Fennimore Place, is that before he thought he might be the reincarnation of Mark Twain, and after he thought he was the reincarnation of Jim Morrison, he thought he might have been a very strange science fiction writer named Philip K. Dick. During the time Joe Kaye believed he might have been Philip K. Dick, he wrote a novel called Blind Savior, in which he not only attempted to blend all major religions (Hindu/Jewish/Buddhist/Christian/Muslim/Taoist) into one, but also attempted to say all major religions were started by the same person reincarnated again and again. He buried the story in an unknown location. The world was not ready.

About the Author
Joseph DeMarco was born in New York City; he lived most of his life in Buffalo, NY. He now teaches seventh grade on the island of Oahu, Hawaii. He is the author of the novels Plague of the Invigilare, The 4 Hundred and 20 Assassins of Emir Abdullah-Harazins, and At Play in the Killing Fields. He is currently working on several new projects.
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   In studying religion, Felix had come to the consensus he believed all people would come to if they studied religion long enough. I’m talking really studying religion, not just showing up at church or your mosque once a week and going through the motions. I’m talking about reading all sacred texts, studying them for months, for years, until you understand the concepts behind each religion. The consensus Felix had come to after hours, months, years of research was that all religions are the same. They are no different. They are just described differently.

    It would be like showing up in Germany and asking for water. An intelligent German would say we have no water, but we do have wasser. If you went to Russia asking for water, they might look at you like you told them V.I. Lenin just got up out of his see-through tomb and started to walk. The Russian word for water is spelled B-O-(this funny looking letter in the Cyrillic alphabet that looks like a crooked A with the hole stretched out in the middle, but is pronounced De)-A. That’s spelled BOAA. If you went to China you would have similar problems, yet in the end you would get the same thing; you would get a glass of water. And to Felix, remember, God is water.


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