One Great Year: A
Novel. Tamara Veitch and Rene DeFazio. Greenleaf Book Group
Press. October 2013. 456 pp. pbk. ISBN #: 9781626340237.
Marcus,
Theron and Helghul are Emissaries who each handle the looming end of the Golden
Age in Atlantis in different ways.
Marcus and Helghul vie for Theron’s love, but Theron refuses to choose
one over the other, seeing the good in each.
Marcus inadvertently watches as Helghul enters a pact of Dark Magic that
sets them as enemies for thirteen thousand years. For each of the three, as well as other Emissaries,
will be reborn in that role, but only three (not Theron) will remember their
past lives due to a potion they drank in their first lifetime. Their mission, as they leave an Atlantis collapsing
into the sea, is to spread Enlightenment, the Oneness of all men, women, and
nature.
Marcus’s
role as Emissary is often confused by his desperate search for Theron in every
lifetime. Helghul on the other hand
fully embraces the mission to bring darkness and destruction in each lifetime,
always imprisoning or killing Marcus when he finds him. In some lifetimes, no
one finds any of the other pivotal three characters.
So
the three are reborn in Bolivia, Greece, Egypt, Mongolia, other European
nations, and finally America. While there
they teach thousands of people about the wisdom of the ages, all the while
focusing on the key message of the Oneness of all. In one lifetime they are guided into the
hidden Shambala where they are allowed to rest and revitalize their healing
energy and powers. It’s a story of
peace, love, and compassion – the dream life all yearn for but are not willing
to pursue and pay the price for obtaining such a vision and/or way of life. Finally,
in a turbulent, astonishing finale they converge at the Pyramids of Egypt where
they will first encounter tests to prove they have retained their Emissary
mission and then unite to usher in a new Golden Age.
One Great Year is a first novel of a planned
trilogy. It is obviously superbly
researched and much of that learning is provided with a bibliography and links
at the end of the novel. This reviewer
loved this novel but wonders how it will be received by the public. It’s not it’s too long but there is a
circular cycle of plot that might be off-putting – good guy born and spreading
a positive message followed by another conflict with bad guy. I would suggest, even at the cost of reducing
size, that there be some more meat in what was taught and done in each lifetime
(even if it has to be conflict but not the repetitive fight between Marcus and
Helghul). Example – what did Plato teach
and how was it received – not blind acceptance but pros and cons included briefly.
Still,
all in all, this is a very impressive novel with a very important message that
all of us deep down and on the surface know is the ultimate truth. The authors are to be commended for this
Herculean effort and despite its repetitive cycle, it is well worth reading
every single page. Very well done
historical/fantasy/ paranormal fiction!
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