Dreamtime
By Paula Blais Gorgas

Price: $6.99
Rating:
 
(2793 Ratings)
Categories: Fantasy Romance, Romance, Science Fiction Romance, UNCATEGORIZED
ISBN: 0981704905
Publisher: Dragonfly Publishing, Inc.
Language: English

Summary

A small town reporter believes a mysterious light in the sky followed her brother-in-law and left him traumatized. However, a local therapist remains skeptical. It\'s up to the shy reporter to work her magic on the good doctor. Can she convince him to open his mind--as well as his wounded heart--to the unfathomable wonders of the universe and the possibility of alien abductions?

About Paula Blais Gorgas

Paula Blais Gorgas lives in Oklahoma with her husband Chet, a retired Navy Commander turned pro-golfer. Together they have four grown sons and nearly a dozen grandchildren. Paula has worked as an NSA intelligence analyst and as a children\'s librarian. Fiction publications include: DREAMTIME, EARTH MAGIC, and OTHER WORLDS. Children\'s picture book publications include: LITTLE LOST LEPRECHAUN and THE PERFECT PURPLE PRESENT.

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Helpful Customer Reviews

Dreamtime

Natalie
Natalie (Mission Viejo, CA) Thu Jul 17 2008 11:11
A beautiful, powerful, simple, real, spiritual book that is easy to read. One of my top 10 of all time... so far!
Blaire
Blaire (The United States) Sat Feb 28 2009 18:27
This book is somewhere between a memoir and fiction. The author has called it a novel, but says in a beginning note to the reader that it's really true. She gives her reasons for calling it fiction which make sense, I guess. So I view it as a memoir that must be taken with a grain of salt. At an...more...
Kari
Kari (Provo, UT) Wed May 14 2008 07:36
It was ok, but didnt love it. I have read many other books that have inspired me more. Fiction or not, it was a bit slow. I wouldnt read it again.
Beth
Beth (Ronkonkoma, NY) Mon May 17 2010 11:57
This book can somewhat be summed up by the four quotes at the beginning of the book: Man did not weave the web of life, he is merely a strand in it. Whatever he does to the web, he does to himself. -American Chief Seattle The only way to pass any test is to tak...more...
Diane
Diane (The United States) Fri Nov 21 2008 10:22
I have mixed feelings about this book. It is reminiscent of Native American religion and at the same time totally new age in it's message. With messages like 'be kind to the earth', 'we are all connected', etc. the messages strike a cord within the common bonds of humanity, but because the autho...more...
Kelly
Kelly (The United States) Tue Mar 03 2009 16:38
Another book club selection I would not have read otherwise... Uhmmm, I read most of this, skimmed the rest, which seemed to be saying the same thing. We Americans are complete pigs, which is bad, but the native peoples of the world are just great, walking about barefoot and hungry. The w...more...
Josh
Josh (moscow, Russian Federation) Tue Jan 27 2009 23:37
sometimes you just read things because there are lots of used copies of them being sold in the very small book selection in the stores, when you live somewhere there are few books. i had no idea how people virulently hated this book. i can't say i hated it -- i found it compelling enough to read unt...more...
Peter
Peter (Sydney, Australia) Sun Feb 15 2009 20:33
This is a piece of complete bilge, a gross and grotesquely offensive attempt to misrepresent Australian Aboriginal culture. To call it a load of bollocks would be excessively polite. Please refer to http://dumbartung.org.au/ and follow the links, to find out what real Australian Aborigines think o...more...
Diane
Diane (Milwaukee, WI) Fri Apr 09 2010 12:03
I recently rediscovered & reread this first person account of the author's 120-day walkabout in the Australian bush with an Aboriginal tribe, the Real People. Believing she was being taken to a luncheon speaking engagement, the author finds herself delivered to a remote hut where she is led to parti...more...
Angela
Angela (Reno, NV) Thu Apr 02 2009 23:53
I really enjoyed this book. We read it for my AP English class, and my teacher juxtaposed our reading of this book with Candide and Siddhartha, as they all have to do with self-discovery. I certainly liked this book the best, although I was surprised that people in my class did not share my feelings...more...