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Fiction literature — What does Charles Dickens, powers of creation, and quantum concepts have in common? Creator!

July 08, 2010 By: Guitarizm Category: Gift of Guitar

Fiction literature includes some strange books like the Lord Of The Rings, Perfume, and Creator by M.A. Hills.

Creator is perhaps one of the oddest fiction literature books around, wholly original, yet similar to the first two. Very modern in its quantum concepts, and message of hope through technology, at the same time it is brilliantly written in a Charles Dickens style language. Look at it here now: fiction literature

This fiction literature is all about paradise on earth, all about the fleeting beauty that surrounds us right now that most of us are blind to, the eternal moment. It talks about the hidden powers of creation that we all posses, the true potential of mankind.

This fiction literature describes the eighth wonder of the world, an Olympian city that is built in the desert. A metropolis of peace and learning, a technologically advanced city not unlike the Venus project: an intelligent, brave, daring, progressive new look of how our future should be. Using modern science and technology the Venus project will bring real progress to the human race, if the human race will allow it. Creator carries the same upbeat, practical message of hope like the Venus project. Get Creator here and now:literature fiction

Creator has deep interwoven, layered symbolic meanings, which are all completely correct depending on the readers level of understanding, which mean it is also a myth. And like the Bible it has a straightforward narrative about this miracle worker and his struggle, and at the same time it is a highly meaningful symbolic epic, which dramatically gives us clues to the hidden powers within all of us. Philosophically it clearly shows us that nothing is impossible, and our greatest hindrance is our self ignorance.

The fiction literature of Creator makes it a multiple meaningful book. Thus, depending on the readers age and experience, Creator could be read one day, and the reader will pull out meaning, pick it up the next week, and see it in a whole new light.

This is how Creator begins:

Creator, M. A. Hills, Part One, The Jewel:

In the days of yore when the Christian God sent his only son to save the wretched human race, the Olympian spirits sent a saviour of their own. Unlike Jesus, the saintly pagan son was not without sin, nor error; nor would he ignore temptations, and desire. Ill-fated from the start, he would not become a humble carpenter either, but one who is skilled in warfare, thievery, and deceit. To be sure, if the gods had great ambitions for their Olympian saviour, it seems they were inclined to keep him in the dark. For he who would begin his life without a name, or an inkling of whence he came–the last descendant of a vanishing legacy–would someday be called to perform great miracles, whether he liked it or not. His providence was to become a creator; and now his story will be told.
Thus, during the month of Martius, in the year 1 AD, Virginia Marius became pregnant in a very extraordinary way. She had neither a boyfriend, nor any kind of sexual relationship. Her doctor swore he had never seen anything like it before, swore she was still a virgin. Her father swore it was the work of iniquity: of the mischievous spirits of the dead. Worse still, he would see to it that the child was cut from her belly–like they did to save the life of Caesar–and exterminated…

Creator is a dangerously fun and enlightening novel of fiction literature, which might be the best read of your life. Creator is when fantasy becomes myth, becomes reality. You can get Creator here: great literature

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