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Beyond Stone and Steel: A Memorial to the September 11, 2001 Victims | 
enlarge | Author: Brian W. Vaszily Brand: Hard Shell Word Factory Category: Book
List Price: $10.00 Buy New: $5.27 You Save: $4.73 (47%)
New (19) Used (13) from $0.01
Rating: 16 reviews Sales Rank: 561067
Format: .exe Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 108 Operating System: Palm OS Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5 x 0.3
ISBN: 0759905126 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780759905122 ASIN: 0759905126
Publication Date: December 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Beyond Stone and Steel: A Memorial to the September 11 2001 Victims, by Brian W. Vaszily (Ebook)
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| Customer Reviews: Read 11 more reviews...
He writes what and how I wish I could July 23, 2006 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I've had this book a long time. I've read it many times. Each time I experience an expanded and enhanced spiritual and psychic understanding of an event I thought I'd come to terms with long ago. Probably because he doesn't journalistically report exactly what happened; probably because he presents the psychic reality of his personal experience: that experience enlarges our own. I was watching a local Spanish station at the time because, of course, the antenna for regular major news media broadcasting was destroyed. At the time I worked in an international on-line network. I remember being physically discomfited by others, elsewhere in the country/world, speaking as though they had some inherent legitimate authority to tell me what was happening less than 3 miles away (by flying crow). But that fortuitous allegation reminded me that the unthinkable event had happened to the "World" Trade Center - not the "New York" Trade Center. I remembered that New York Harbor was a major trading center, a stock exchange in physical goods dating back to the 1600s and housed in the Custom House which is still there. The traders were Dutchmen. I, too, have a semi-tangible psychic reality about the entire 400-year time line. We live in a spiritual world and there is still much that we really don't understand but we do get glimpses of it along the way.
Most Moving 9-11 Tribute I Have Read June 2, 2003 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This slim volume greatly humanizes the lives, hopes, fear and dreams of those about to die. It is fiction...no real names are used. It reminds us that of the thousands who died, every one of them was a living, breathing person, just like us. This is a small masterpiece and deserving of your attention.
A Very Moving Experience May 17, 2002 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
This book was like none other I have ever read... the author seemed to digest this tradegy and somehow turned it into something beautiful. It has reminded me of all that I have, how easily it could be gone and to cherish every moment we are here. It has truly changed the way I see my life. I enjoyed this book very much and highly recommend it to everyone.
Inspiration and Self Examination--A Beautiful Combination May 15, 2002 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
"Beyond Stone and Steel" by Brian W. Vaszily recounts a personal passage from one mental state to another far better one, describes the slow, step-by-step trudge often required by events much larger than ourselves. That event might be death. That event might be the loss of a job. That event might be rejection. That event might be bankruptcy. Or the event might be national loss. For this author, all of these experiences played a part in his transformation. Right from the first chapter, Vaszily makes no secret of the result; what he discovered on his path down misfortune's lane is that he is "a lucky man" in spite of the hardships he has suffered. This slim volume may be difficult to take, depending on the reader's status with recovery from the events of 9/11. Regardless of one's recovery status, though, it may be just what the doctor ordered. Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of "This is the Place"
Inspiration and Self Examination--A Beautiful Combination May 15, 2002 "Beyond Stone and Steel" by Brian W. Vaszily recounts a personal passage from one mental state to another far better one, describes the slow, step-by-step trudge often required by events much larger than ourselves. That event might be death. That event might be the loss of a job. That event might be rejection. That event might be bankruptcy. Or the event might be national loss. For this author, all of these experiences played a part in his transformation. Right from the first chapter, Vaszily makes no secret of the result; what he discovered on his path down misfortune's lane is that he is "a lucky man" in spite of the hardships he has suffered. This slim volume may be difficult to take, depending on the reader's status with recovery from the events of 9/11. Regardless of one's recovery status, though, it may be just what the doctor ordered. Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of "This is the Place"
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