Hunt Henion

Hunt Henion

About

Hunt Henion writes for the Examiner and has been involved in deciphering the spiritual nature of life his entire life. He has a PhD in Religious Studies and is a best-selling author.  He's written five books and compiled two anthologies (both Amazon Best-sellers)..

Heir to a Prophecy

Heir to a Prophecy

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Description

<p><span><span>Shakespeare's Witches tell Banquo, &quot;Thou Shalt 'Get Kings Though Thou Be None&quot;. Though Banquo is murdered, his son Fleance gets away. What happened to Fleance? What Kings? As Shakespeare's audience apparently knew, Banquo was the ancestor of the royal Stewart line. But the road to kingship had a most inauspicious beginning, and we follow Fleance into exile and death, bestowing the Witches' prophecy on his illegitimate son Walter. Born in Wales and raised in disgrace, Walter's efforts to understand Banquo's murder and honor his lineage take him on a long and treacherous journey through England and France before facing his destiny in Scotland.</span></span></p>

Story Behind The Book

Reviews

<p style="margin:0in 0in 0pt;" class="MsoNormal"><font size="3"><font face="Times New Roman"><span> </span><span>  </span><span>       </span>“…his character's evolving consciousness in sequential lifetimes suggests a karmic series of actions and consequences…compatible with the most robust cases evaluated by the Reincarnation Experiment.” (Paul Von Ward, author of <em>The Soul Genome: Science and Reincarnation</em>.)<br /><br /></font></font></p> <p style="margin:0in 0in 0pt;" class="MsoNormal"><em>“ In addition to inspiring views, Henion shares stories behind the stories.<span>  </span>… his style of pinpointing motivations and actions made for even more interesting reading.</em><span>  </span>--Michelle A. Payton, Ph.D., Author of <em>“Birth Mix Patterns,</em>” “<em>Healing What’s Real</em>,” and<em>“Soul”utions.</em>”<span>  <br /><br />&quot;...</span></p> <p style="text-align:justify;margin:0in 0in 0pt;" class="MsoNormal"><span lang="en-gb" xml:lang="en-gb">Now, more than four centuries on, Hunt Henion’s </span><em><span lang="en-gb" xml:lang="en-gb">The Don Q Point of View </span></em><span lang="en-gb" xml:lang="en-gb">comes as the latest in a long line of tributes. It might be thought difficult to say anything new about the Don, but in these pages we have a reliving of the Man of la Mancha’s life and hard times that is <strong>startling in its originality</strong>.&quot;</span></p><p></p> <p style="margin:0in 0in 0pt;" class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family:'Times New Roman';font-size:12pt;" lang="en-gb" xml:lang="en-gb">-- Christopher Rollason, Ph.D, Metz, France – rollason@9online, <a href="http://www.geocities.com/christopherrollason">www.geocities.com/christopherrollason</a></span></p>