Author:Phyllis Speight
In this book Speight helps people find another way of dealing with anxieties, grief, stress and many conditions for which tranquillising drugs are so often prescribed.
There is little doubt that addiction to tranquillising drugs has caused considerable concern amongst sufferers. This booklet will bring new hope and enable many to obtain relief by means of remedies that deal with the cause of the trouble and thus eliminate the need for drug therapy.
There are certain threads that run through the work of John O'Donohue. They manifest themselves with different colours and textures. The form may change for different purposes of rhythm and resonance, but the intention remains constant. It is grounded in human vulnerability and the desire, the longing, for a connection to the wonder of the divine in nature, and human life within it.
—— Michael D Higgins, politician and broadcasterHutchinson means what he says about demystifying his subject - by the biography's end there's not a stone left unturned
—— The ScotsmanA level-headed reappraisal of a man whose fantasies were fuelled as much by self-publicity as by any real demonic contact
Well informed and cool-headed . . . one can see that Crowley's own words would be of little use in conveying the facts of his life, which Hutchinson does admirably
—— New York Times