David Harrington

David Harrington

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Friends in High Places

Friends in High Places

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<p>FRIENDS IN HIGH PLACES<br /><br />At barely nineteen, Angelica Donovan became one of the more successful winners of the T.V. show Our Next Super Model. The world assumed she was destined for a happy, fairy tale life as ‘Angel,’ the beautiful girl who was living the dream; sadly, that wasn’t to be the case. As the years passed, she flashed her million dollar smile to all her fans and fought to stay on top in a profession where you never knew who it was safe to trust while the fashion industry took big bites out of her heart and soul. And trust was a constant challenge for Angel due to the painful childhood secret she guarded as carefully as she did her heart. As a result, she never did find her true love on earth.<br /><br />When she wakes up ‘dead’ from a heart condition a month before her thirty-fifth birthday, Angel is at first relieved to find there is no death, just a change of state, like ice to water, and then she’s scared because her biggest and most important adventure is about to begin.<br /><br />Angelica is chosen to be an angel in training as a spirit guide for three souls on earth! Her assignment is to help two women to gain the courage and confidence to find, recognize and embrace the love that had eluded Angel in life. But her biggest challenge will be to save a very special little girl from the same evil experience that had poisoned Angel’s own earthly happiness and altered the course of her life.<br /><br />Will Angel be able to heal her own shattered soul in the process? And will the three souls she is guiding be able to recognize her, not as a ghostly threat, but as one of those ‘friends in high places’ we all have; the kind who often end up earning their wings.<br /><br /> </p>

Story Behind The Book

Collection of short allegories based on a series of mystical and esoteric visions.

Reviews

<p>&quot;INCLINATIONS&quot; by David B. Harrington<br />Book Review by Ariel Monserrat, Editor of Green Egg Zine<br /><br /> Our very own Green Egg poet laureate has written a book of poetry and it's been published!  Anyone familiar with his work knows that he creates beautiful images with his words.  While David loves to learn about other religions and has reverence for them, this book of poems is written from the view point of Abrahamic religions.  It talks about God, Lucifer and angels.  It may seem weird to review a book that has such a slant, but having read David's poetry in<em> Inclinations,</em> I greatly enjoyed the imagery and mysticism.  He takes the reader through a series of visions that were shown to him by the holy ones.  My favorite poem is &quot;Living Butterflies&quot; where leaves fall from the trees and turn into butterflies, inspiring the reader with wondrous surreal imagery.  I would recommend this book to anyone, whatever their religious beliefs for its imagery and beauty of words.<br /><br /><br />Review by Grace Bridges of the Lost Genre Guild and Splashdown Books:<br /><br /> In the manner of Biblical prophets but with hints of modern science, David Harrington has constructed a striking and oftentimes disturbing series of narratives.  I hesitate to call &quot;Inclinations&quot; either a novel or even fiction, though I confess I am not sure what it is meant to be.  Is the declamatory style only reminiscent of the wild men of the Old Testament, or is there something else at stake here?  It's full of images that flash by in a moment and then are gone, leaving the reader to consider what they might represent alot like the Book of Revelation, clearly not meant to be understood at face value:  Celestial apparitions, kings and queens, plagues, symbolic animals and horns, angels and demons.  The large-scale events described here are shocking and even venomous at times, while the exhortations to the reader are no less jolting.  I wont pretend to comprehend the intent of all these &quot;visions&quot;, though a few of them struck me as being theologically unusual and occasionally downright peculiar.  This is a religious book and may prove inspiring to some.<br /><br /></p> <p>Review by Steven Fivecats, Editor of Yellow30SciFi<br /><br />David Harrington's <em>Inclinations</em> might well suit a time in history that for modern man has long been forgotten.  On first read this book might be considered as one of the missing books of the Bible.  This intriguingly mixture of poetry and prose quickly puts one in remembrance of ancient monks sequestered in monasteries in days gone by.  The narrative and style follows such books of the Holy Scripture like Isiah, Jeremiah or Daniel. In fact, this might even be considered the 'Book of Tixen' if one were to label it such.  In this small volume one will find the brief overview of the origins of angels and their rebellion against their Creator.  However, the book departs biblical perspectives as it weaves stories of nymphs, mermaids and mystics.  As with all ancient books concerning the mysteries and origins of life, <em>Inclinations</em> has its prophetic side and speaks of Judgment and Apostasy.  It will be interesting to see what comes next from the pen of David Harrington. <br /><br /><br /></p>