Via Books
Via Books
With a Spiritual Theme
Marcus Bolt
Marcus Bolt

Announcing Two New Publications from Via Books:

Monkey Trap by Marcus Bolt
The Halcyon Way by H.T. Cockburn

Warning Note: both books contain plot driven scenes of a sexual nature, some violence and an amount of cussin' - nothing gratuitous though, all germaine to character and plot.

Marcus and the Ancesters - Review in Subud Voice

Previous puplications by Marcus Bolt

Saving Grace (Thirty Years in Subud) - Marcus Bolt (Via Books)
The Great Laugh Force - Cambell & Bolt (Trouser Press)

Stay at Subud Loudwater Farm - London, UK

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Monkey Trap

Monkey Trap by Marcus Bolt

Jon Lucke is a thirty-something adman with an unhappy marriage, a failing business and a lifetime of disappointments - until he has a chance meeting with the urbane, ultra-rich Marco Brancusi... Jon is lured into Marco's orbit and catapulted with bewildering speed into a world of glittering success, where it seems all he has ever dreamed of is at last within his reach...

And that's just the book-within-the-book, created by the reclusive David O'Connor...

Gradually David's alter ego begins to see what he has lost in gaining a life of power and luxury; and when the true nature of what he's involved in begins to unfold, he has to make some  dangerously difficult choices... And from then on, you're never quite sure what's real and what's not...

Part Faust-with-a-twist, part Hollywood- style blockbuster, Monkey Trap zips along, mingling psycho-spiritual insight with out-and-out adventure in an entertaining and thought-provoking mix.

•Monkey Trap by Marcus Bolt
•ISBN Number: 0-9535766-20
•Paperback, 328 pages £6.99
Order from Amazon.co.uk
•Or order from Via Books, Loudwater Farm, Loudwater Lane, Rickmansworth, Herts WD3 4HG.
•Enclose your name and address and UK cheque made out to Via Books for £9.00 (includes p+p).

Review:

Manuela Mackenzie reviews Monkey Trap by Marcus Bolt and says it is book for “you and your animal”...

The first thing to say about this book is how readable I found it. When the demands of life meant I had to put it down, I looked forward to getting back to it and following the fortunes of the hero – I really wanted to know what happened next.

In Monkey Trap, Marcus Bolt has managed the difficult task of writing about a spiritual journey using the medium of fiction. The journey, as indeed it must be, is rooted in the here-and-now and demonstrates how the very place we inhabit, the very composition of ourselves, is at the heart of the spiritual experience.

Combining the Subud concept of the spiritual imperative and the understanding of the forces we are inextricably bound up with in this world, and his knowledge of our psychological motivations, Marcus has created a story that explores the effect on us of all these influences.

And it is to the author’s credit that rarely does the narrative slip into lecture, or a plot development feel suspect. The reader can always remain in tune with – if not always approving of – the protagonist’s actions, reactions and motives.

As the story begins we are introduced to a reclusive author who, it soon emerges, is living in the near future, either of this world or a very close parallel.

We are then taken into the novel he has been writing, and follow the adventures of Jon Lucke, ‘a thirty-something adman’ as he experiences life as loser, winner, sceptic and believer – but not necessarily in that order, and sometimes more than once.

The first major turn on Jon’s path is his apparently accidental involvement with a group of people who are embodied with the essence of the animal force.

How Jon copes with the consequences this has on his life and on others, and what happens when he begins to question the choices expected of him, plus the emerging relationship between the characters of this book-within-a-book and their secluded creator, makes for entertaining and thought-provoking reading.

The way Marcus depicts the power of the animal force and its consequences for its hosts, and develops the idea of this being the driving motivator in the race for global dominance, is convincing; it is also very apposite for the experience the world is having right now.

Fortunately, that slightly depressing thought can be countered by recalling his vivid description of experiencing the world from the true human level. And one can recognise the rightness of his assertion that interaction between all the forces – material, vegetable, animal and human – is mandatory for this plane of existence.

So, if you are interested in a take on the low forces, in human psychology, a spiritual journey or just like a well-told story that includes suspense, murder, sex and love, and more than a hint of conspiracy theory, then I think you’ll enjoy this book. I did.

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Halcyon Way

The Halcyon Way by H.T. Cockburn

The novel is on the theme of redemption and written by a 'writer in Subud'. It is funny and serious, spiritual and earthy - a ripping yarn for the easyJet age - "like a collaboration between Kurt Vonnegut and Enid Blyton."

•The Halcyon Way by H.T. Cockburn
•ISBN Number: 0-9535766-12
•Paperback 336 pages £6.99
Order from Amazon.co.uk
•Or order from Via Books, Loudwater Farm, Loudwater Lane, Rickmansworth, Herts WD3 4HG.

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