Carpadiem Dark

by Michael Markevich


Formats

Softcover
$16.95
E-Book
$3.99
Softcover
$16.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 12/10/2014

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 182
ISBN : 9781496951083
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 182
ISBN : 9781496951076

About the Book

The three titles, “Carpadia,” “Toward Carpatian Divinity,” and “Carpadiem Dark,” are drawn from a deep sense of quantum, sufi-gnostic unity displaying provenance throughout the “Homeric Path” of those who would contribute.
Michael considers these brief narratives as considerable descriptions of the human condition. His research and soul evaluation, literary investigation, and imaginative allegoric style and again, very important, “passion,” have opened a gate of soul adventure.

“Carpadiem Dark” is a simple situation that suggests the presence of a dark divine influence in the corner of every “moment” experienced by a rational organic. God is not light, which is visible—perhaps the “spark” so often spoken of—but the “reservoir” must be an unknowable dark unity of chaos possibility from which anything and everything may be fashioned.


About the Author

Michael grew up in a blue-collar town where most of the teens talked about making their escape. He made a personal commitment to do just that, first into the world and then into the written word. “Meeshe” became a sax player and joined funk and reggae bands. He flew hang gliders and ultralights and took his scuba skills to Palancar, the Red Sea, and the Great Barrier Reef. He took motorcycle and Jeep trips to Alaska and the Yukon. There were sport sailing regattas in the strong trades of the Dominican Republic and cruising on fifty-footers off the British Virgin Islands. He taught sailing off the coast of Queensland and took out kayak excursions in the caves near Guaymas. He met the wrong people in Cartagena, drank beer with friendly revolutionaries in Chiapas, and there was pastoral mayhem on a kibbutz in Israel during the Gulf War. His Arab friends took him to the Dome of the Rock; he crawled into the catacombs under the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, and he read of the “Qaballah” at the citadel of ancient Caesaria Maratima. The journey into the written word then forcefully beckoned, and he settled in White Rock, British Columbia. Here, over the period of a decade, he penned a trilogy that took him into the spiritual passion of heart’s desire. “Meeshe” unveiled the first three stories from actual experience and imagination blended with the teaching of significant sages, scripture, and ancient knowledge.