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Odeon Paradise - Palmer, John
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Sooner or later, most people reach a point where they wish that they could change, really change, something about who they are. Whatever the cause -- a lost love or a mid-life crisis -- they sit down and think, "I just can't stand who I am, and I would give anything to change!" Can they? In Odeon Paradise: A Night at the Movies with Jesus and George, the answer is an emphatic, "Yes...with a little help." For George, a young church organist/choirmaster who arrives at the Pearly Gates considerably ahead of schedule and with a lot to answer for, "a little help" involves the combined efforts of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Sooner or later, most people reach a point where they wish that they could change, really change, something about who they are. Whatever the cause -- a lost love or a mid-life crisis -- they sit down and think, "I just can't stand who I am, and I would give anything to change!" Can they? In Odeon Paradise: A Night at the Movies with Jesus and George, the answer is an emphatic, "Yes...with a little help." For George, a young church organist/choirmaster who arrives at the Pearly Gates considerably ahead of schedule and with a lot to answer for, "a little help" involves the combined efforts of Jesus, Freud, Shakespeare, Bach, and a host of heavenly others, who help him, sometimes in spite of himself, to become a better man, as they join him in the Odeon Paradise, a little theater in Heaven, to watch a movie of the last year of his life. A humorous story with a serious point, Odeon Paradise: A Night at the Movies with Jesus and George will appeal not only to those who enjoyed stories like A Christmas Carol or The Five People You Meet in Heaven, but to anyone who has found his hopes and dreams tied in knots, and wishes that he could get "a little help" in turning his life around.
Autorenporträt
John Palmer grew up close to Lake Erie saying he always wanted to live near the water. Sailing and power boating in New Jersey and then owning three power boats on Lake Erie, he continued to boat when he moved to the Cape Fear region of North Carolina where the Cape Fear River intersects the Intracoastal Waterway, the ICW, before flowing into the Atlantic Ocean with Bald Head Island to the East and Oak Island to the West.