The Author The Author

 
 



 

MESSENGER
from the
Summer of Love
                
A Story of Enlightenment,
with a
Message for our Future 

by David Rey Echt

 

There are moments in history that usher in a new dawn. In America, in the Sixties, that moment was the summer of '67. Messenger from the Summer of Love is a story that goes to the foundation of the movement. Many of us remember how something mysterious and wonderful touched the world at that time. We remembered our essence: we remembered how to love.

Authors and critics have said:

“There was definitely something extraordinary - even profound - about that time, and I think the explanation given in this novel is a perfect metaphor - or maybe even the truth… It turned me on.”
-Melody Record, book reviewer for Good Times Entertainment Magazine, Santa Cruz, CA

Echt clearly describes Trevor's hopes, fears and sensations in the presence of an enlightened being.Messenger from the Summer of Love is an interesting hybridization of novel and spiritual text. It gives the uninitiated reader a small taste of the freedom, excitement, and spiritual fervor of the late '60s. It's a worthy book ... It's one man's story of an extraordinary summer. It's the spreading of a message that desperately needs to be shared.
-Lynn T. Theodose, book reviewer for The Boulder Weekly

“If you are curious as to what really went on during the hippie era, then this book is for you… Echt’s account is… an accurate account of the inner and outer details of a colorful period of the recent past and deserves a wide readership.” 
-Paul De Mey, editor of New Renaissance Magazine.
(Editor
Paul De Mey lived in Haight-Ashbury during the late '60's)

“Was not sure I wanted to read about 'free love' - physical love is rarely 'free', and few humans are. But to my surprise that was not what the book was about. After I got the drift, I followed along and was moved by the story. Thank you. A 'good read'.
-robert wolff, author
of A Book of Dreams
(Author robert wolff lived in Haight-Ashbury during the late '60's)

“David Echt, has done justice to that time and after reading this book, I for one have a renewed sense of meaning and purpose.”
-Skip Stone, author of Hippies from A-Z


“I loved it. Wonderful evocative, and just so much the way it was. The message was heart-felt and heart opening.”
-James Fadiman, author of The Other Side of Haight
(Author James Fadiman lived in Haight-Ashbury during the late '60's and is mentioned in Tom Wolfe's The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test) 

At a time when the world seems to have forgotten how to love, this gentle book can go a long way toward reminding us of the capacity we all share for harmony and unity and peace. It might nudge you into recognizing how much fear you carry around with you and help you lay that aside in favor of love. Be sure to wear some flowers in your hair...and read this book.
-Terrie Allison Reese, Amazon-Listmania Reviewer
(Reviewer Terrie Reese lived in Haight-Ashbury during the late '60's)

“...there's some serious mojo in this book (or, more precisely, accessible "through" it, if you know what I mean). There are a few passages that will actually give you the spiritual equivalent of a contact high just from reading them. That's a nice feature, given the aim of the book.

If you lived through this period of time (whether or not you were at ground zero), this book will help to remind you of its real meaning. If not, the first-person narrative will show you what the air tasted like, so to speak. Either way, this text can push you a little further toward mindfulness, if you want it to.”
-Scott Ryan, Amazon-Listmania Reviewer

This book gives a valuable insight into a long lost time in which it was bad etiquette NOT to smile with a stranger in the street or explore the body and soul in a way almost unimaginable today. This book will make you re-evaluate everything important to you... and its probably time for a revolution.
I just have one passing question, "What happened to the
dream?".
-
Amazon Reviewer from London, UK

"For those of us fortunate enough to have felt the spiritual opening that occured on a global level in 1967, and were touched individually by this, David's book is a fond reminder of a time of innocence and expansion of soul."
-Review from 60sfurther website

"I spent half of today reading your book, Messenger..." from start to finish..  Wow!  I feel envy for not having come across the Master myself back in 1967.  But you know, all of us who were of the right age certainly felt supernatural stirrings in the air.   As a NY City hippie who felt the vibes but did not follow the pull to run away to Haight-Ashbury, it is a time I have never been able to put out of my mind...  Thanks for having written that book."
-Author, Pearl Cawely

"Messenger from the Summer of Love" is one of those rare novels that can resonate with multiple generations. Middle-aged Baby Boomers and hippies who roamed the globe in search of answers to eternal questions in the Sixties and Seventies will find in this novel a confirmation of their youth. In this age of cynicism, that's not an easy statement to make. Today's young people will find that their concerns about war, the environment, spiritual values, and the meaning of life are not limited to their own generation's experience. As an educator, I highly recommend this novel to readers of all ages. It provides a much-needed bridge, an avenue of dialogue between generations. Take the journey. All you need is love.
-- Robert W. Norris, author of "Looking for the Summer," "Toraware," and "The Many Roads to Japan"

http://www2.gol.com/users/norris/

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SampleText
[ Introduction | Chapter (1) The Souls Journey | Top]

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Updated 12/8/2003

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