What can bring more meaning to your life?Do you long for a more vibrant connection to God?
You’re in good company. For decades, Rose Rosetree struggled with her Divine connection. Bigger than All the Night Sky is a multi-layered memoir about coming of age spiritually.
- WHERE Rose’s teenage bedroom featured the pin-up image of... Picasso’s eyes.
- HOW this prolific author once struggled to overcome writer’s block.
- WHAT most students of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi have never seen even once: When Rose read him a poem, "Fealty," it moved him to tears. (Incidentally, that same poem appears in this memoir.)
- Spiritual Memoir and Spiritual Awakening both apply.
- As does the concept of Spiritual But Not Religious.
- This book is also relevant to those with an interest in meditation, Transcendental Meditation, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, and/or Baba Ram Dass.
- This could be considered a near-death experience memoir as well.
- It’s a Baby Boomer memoir, set in New York in the Sixties (that is, the 1960s).
- Many chapters qualify this to be considered a Hippie Book. Including personal references to Timothy Leary.
- Secular Jews - this memoir is relevant to readers who are interested in Jewish-Americans, First-Generation Americans, and American Immigrants.
- Finally, in a very unusual way, this memoir is about Premature Babies, i.e., Preemies. Usually such memoirs concern the parents, and how they coped with a premature child. By contrast, this book recounts personal experience of the Preemie. What it was like, moving on from the incubator and, in some respects, taking decades to catch up to normal development.