Theodore J. Nottingham Books
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Perfect for all ages!Review Date: 1998-06-23
It's about time!Review Date: 1998-06-22
Inspiration Time!Review Date: 2000-04-30
Forget the self help books,which many times are sexist and limiting,dare to expand your creativity and imagination by reading this book of imagination and just plain fun!
Get cozy and float away into a brillant worldReview Date: 1999-10-22
Get this book,great for a cold winter night, also releaves tension,if you've had a tough day at the office,you'll forget all about it!
A wonderful story for young and old alikeReview Date: 1998-07-04

A view of the near future...Review Date: 2003-01-06
Although this novel was written in 1997, it is even more relevant today. Based on familiar views of our planet's future from the Biblical "Book Of Revelation", this novel gives a more human side to the spiritual "war to end all wars" and brings the stories into our everyday world of the 21st Century.
Nottingham is a gifted, insightful and perhaps prophetic writer who will appeal to those who look beyond religious doctrine to see the "bigger picture" of the spiritual reality around us. Opening our eyes to the possibilities of how the cards may be played out and the sad but true way in which men's hearts are polarised to one side or the other ... good or evil, love or fear, peace or war.
Yes, it challenged my preconceptions, but I was unable to put it down for more than a day. It is worth considering!
Best Of The BestReview Date: 2001-04-22
A must-read page turner from cover to cover.Review Date: 1999-06-07
Anxiously awaiting the sequelReview Date: 1998-11-30
Nottingham's latest explosive titleReview Date: 1999-07-17

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The Author Is A Prophet HimselfReview Date: 2001-04-22
Esoteric insight packaged in a compelling story.Review Date: 1997-11-07
The world desperately needs this message!Review Date: 1997-10-14

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It's now written in my heart.Review Date: 2007-02-24
But then, once the way opened to esoteric ("hidden, not secret") path of spirituality, he found that it led him back to his Christian roots. Only now its delicate flower of Christian mysticism, "beyond the ordinary boundaries of our egos... where greater reality is achieved." The chapter on Prayer is worth the price of the entire book!
"Written in Our Hearts" is all about what's real. It's about experiencing the truth rather than accepting it because we're told that it's true. Although the book was written nearly 14 years ago, I plan on using it as an inspirational reference for many years to come.
inspiration overflowingReview Date: 2000-04-30
This book changed my life.Review Date: 1998-11-30

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A Book well expectedReview Date: 2003-01-25

An explosive and fast-paced prophecy of the future.Review Date: 1997-10-14

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this is NOT the UNTOLD story- it's the HALLUCINATED story of john wilkes booth Review Date: 2008-04-07
Booth Was Erratic but Not Demonic.Review Date: 2007-01-12
The theater was a world of false reality and, sometimes, actors forget and tend to lead the lives of the characters they protray on stage. Actually, he lived on a farm in Maryland, 25 miles north of Baltimore. He got his start on the stages of Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Richmond (a place dear to his heart). In 1864, he visited Canada. Shortly before the assassination, he stars in the tours of plays in New York, Baltimore, Chicago, St. Louis, and Boston. He did have a tumor on the back of his neck, which may have caused him to throw caution to the wind and go "hog wild" which his inclinations led him to do.
John had rescued a wounded Yankee soldier in New York City during the Draft Riots in July, 1863. He'd told his sister who was close to him, "My soul, life and possessions are of the South. My profession, my name, is my passport." He appeared to hve free pass everywhere as he was recognized as a notable figure in Washington, D. C.
In a play there at Ford's Theatre, he had warned President Lincoln with his gestures and sharp demeanor in one of which he was the star, as he made threats toward another character each time pointing toward the president. This did not disconcern or upset Lincoln. He had a good sense of humor, and rather laughed it off. Booth publicly criticized the role represented and once was arrested in St. Louis for making "treasonous remarks." What he'd said is common slang today: he wished the President and the government "would go to Hell." He'd had to pay a large fine.
He held Jefferson Davis and the Southern cause "sacred." That's not saying that he would deal with the devil for his life or do anything risky for the Cause. He really thought that he would get away free and clear and, at long last, be a hero for the South. He shot Abraham Lincoln on the evening of April 14, and the president succumbed at 7:22 a.m. on April 15. It was a dasdardly deed and he paid dearly, as his career on the stage was clearly over. Dr. Samuel A. Mudd was pardoned by Andrew Johnson from the prison sentence for treating John Wilkes Booth four years (January 10, 1869) after the "crime against our country."
Interesting family historyReview Date: 2006-04-12
Last half was the best half.Review Date: 2001-09-29
As I said when I reviewed the biography of the Empress Josephine, I tend to like my history "neat," and this is no exception. That doesn't mean that the book is a total waste, however, for a number of reasons. For those readers who prefer the story behind history, the first half of the book should be quite captivating, for it certainly reads like a Shakespearean drama. Nottingham claims to have received some of his ancestor's propensity for drama and grim intensity, and he certainly reveals that when he throws himself into Booth's tale. The setting, character, and plot, including the implication of important figures pulling strings behind the scenes, are interesting enough to hold the attention. I read the first 142 pages in about 2 hours. To some extent the author's choice of words and phrases was a little trite, or perhaps more fairly, a little adolescent. In fact the book might well appeal to adolescent boys who find history too dull because history books are too "dry," a mere collection of names, dates, and places to be memorized for tests if one is to pass them
On a more redeeming note, from my perspective at least, is the final few pages of the volume which are mostly historical data drawn in part form family diaries, reminiscences, photos and documents and in part from public documents. The hurried summation of this data in these final pages certainly provided some justification for the more theatrical pages that preceded it. It also provided data that seemed to support the intimation in the earlier pages of collusion in high places. If nothing else it rubbed away the patina of the ages from the events of that era and revealed the solid brass of the time. Like our own world, full of subterfuge and hidden agendas, political posturing and diplomatic positioning, the post Civil War Era was filled with urgency and moment, with people who won big time and those who lost big time. It demonstrates that nothing under the sun is truly new, especially when it comes to human drama, something that both Shakespeare and Booth would have understood.
I think it's a pity that so little space was given to the documentation and the conclusions to be drawn from it. When I ordered the book, it was that that I expected from it. Given his access to family material, Nottingham could have made it a far more major and serious work of history.
A brilliant work of historical fictionReview Date: 2002-12-11
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