Synchronicity and Precognition is Real or an Illusion

There are a number of mysteries in the universe. This book explores the nature of synchronicity and precognition. Synchronicity involves seemingly unusual coincidences.

Encino, CA, USA., April 04, 2022 - In “Synchronicity and Precognition: Science or Fiction,” the author examines whether there is a scientific or realistic basis to these paranormal phenomena.Is Synchronicity and Precognition Real or an illusion, is the key question discussed in the new book. Donald A. Eisner, Ph.D. J.D. evaluated the studies and came to several startling conclusions.

As it turns out, many of the experiments cannot stand up to close scrutiny. For example, the controversial series of studies by Daryl Bem reported in 2011, does not offer substantial evidence that people can detect the future or that retrocausation exists. But there are a few in the physiological arena that are very tantalizing.

There are a number of mysteries in the universe. This book explores the nature of synchronicity and precognition. Synchronicity involves seemingly unusual coincidences. As an example, if one is thinking about calling a person, and then out of the blue they call. However, there is an element of precognition as well, it’s as if they almost knew or had a predictive hunch the person would call.

In this book, the recent studies on precognition and evaluated. Does the research meet the scientific test as to the reality of precognition? There are many methodical pitfalls in most of the studies. There are only that seem to suggest the possibility precognition.

There are a number of explanations for precognition including quantum physics, brain to brain transfer, the Mandela Effect and the multiverse. Eisner explains that synchroneity actually happens but there no viable explanation for why it occurs. With precognition adequate explanations may not happen for decades or centuries.


About Donald Eisner

I am a licensed psychologist and attorney. I am interested in parapsychology including synchronicity and precognition. I started writing science fiction several years ago. In 2018, I wrote “2034 to 1990: Into the Multiverse.” Because of an existential crisis due to heat from the sun’s corona, a psychologist agreed to be projected back to 1990 where it hopefully would be safe. Unfortunately a Covid-19 pandemic emerged. But enough about that story. My range is vast; some stories are funny, and others a bit satirical. If you like the Hallmark Channel, you will enjoy the Hillmark Stories. That is where a dog assists with her owner’s romantic issues, and another is where Christmas day is repeated. One of the uplifting fantasies covers a spirit guide. So take your pick, you will like at least one of the science fiction and fantasy scenarios.

New Book by Daniel Ruefman What s the Fuzz Survival Stories of a Minor League Mascot

New York, NY – ADELAIDE BOOKS is proud to present the latest work by Daniel Ruefman: What's the Fuzz? Survival Stories of a Minor League Mascot

 

What The Fuzz? is the most unexpected book I've read in a long, long time. Heartfelt and hilarious, this memoir charts the maturity of its author, from a bumbling kid utterly lacking in self-confidence, into an unexpected American blue-collar superhero. This book is chockful of magical moments, moments of levity, and moments of love, friendship, and decency. I read this memoir in a single-sitting and can't wait for more of Ruefman's quirky, kind-hearted writing. What The Fuzz? is a literary underdog that I'll be rooting and cheering for long into the future.” —NICKOLAS BUTLER, bestselling author of SHOTGUN LOVESONGS and GODSPEED

“In What the Fuzz, Daniel Ruefman gives an uproarious glimpse behind the mask, with stories both hilarious and humbling. He shows us that oftentimes, the mascot is the hardest working person in the stadium.” —JOE NIESE, author of HANDY ANDY: THE ANDY PAFKO STORY and BURLEIGH GRIMES: BASEBALL'S LAST LEGAL SPITBALLER

“If you like mascots, you’ll fall in love with Shooter and C. Wolf. Shooter (hockey) throws himself down stairs for cheap cheers, while C. Wolf (baseball) faces near-death experiences--both real and imagined. Behind both furry faces is the author himself, who brings his story to life with humanity and heart. This is for those who like their stories warm and fuzzy.”—DAVID ARETHA, award-winning author and editor

 

 

Daniel Ruefman was born and raised in western Pennsylvania. His prose and poetry have been featured widely in periodicals, including Adelaide, Barely South Review, Burningword, Dialogist, Minetta Review, Red Earth Review, and Sheepshead Review, among others. An alumnus of Edinboro University, Slippery Rock University, and Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Daniel currently teaches writing at the University of Wisconsin – Stout.

 

Title: What the Fuzz?: Survival Stories of a Minor League Mascot
Author: Daniel Ruefman
Publisher: Adelaide Books
Publisher Website: https://adelaidebooks.org/
Publisher Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
ISBN: 978-1956635911
Price: $19.60
Page Count: 198 pages
Format: Paperback

Description of the company: ADELAIDE BOOKS LLC is a New York based independent company dedicated to publishing literary fiction and creative nonfiction. It was founded in July 2017 as an imprint of the Adelaide Literary Magazine, with the aim to facilitate publishing of novels, memoirs, and collections of short stories, poems, and essays by contributing authors of our magazine and other qualified writers.We believe that in doing so, we best fulfill the mission outlined in Adelaide Magazine – “to promote writers we publish, helping both new and emerging, and established authors reaching a wider literary audience.”

Our motto is: We don’t publish classics, we make classics.

New Book by James W White Carp Café

New York, NY – ADELAIDE BOOKS is proud to present the latest work by James W. White: Carp Café

 

I love James White’s Carp Café. With seeming ease and lots of insight, White captures the uniqueness, charm, fragility, and resilience of Carpinteria, a small southern California beach town. Reading it, you will taste the salt on your lips, feel the sand between your toes, hear the waves crashing onto the beach. As to his protagonist, Shelly Friedman, is she on a hero’s journey or is she on a downward slide into alcohol-induced chaos? I highly recommend you read Carp Café and find out. —Toni Morgan, author of the widely acclaimed Queenie’s Place and other novels.

Master story-teller James W. White is back with a guaranteed good time story set in the surf-side town of Carpinteria, California in the aftermath of the horrific Thomas wildfire. Everyone’s got a bit of PTSD, what with the burning mountains and rising sea levels squeezing the town from all directions. Enter Shelly Friedman, a single, 45-year old personnel counselor with a drinking problem, blowing into town for a day trip in her classic sixty-four-and-a-half Mustang. She uncovers the hidden past of a slickster named Tom, a guy she has just screened for a job back in LA. Another guy named Tom, a bartender, sparks a passing fancy. They gin up a commemorative cocktail to honor the fire-fighters who saved the town.

But the man of the hour is surfer Dave, an aging beach bum who comes to Shelly’s rescue when she runs over the town’s favorite yellow lab. Dave’s in Carpinteria because he’s hiding out from Hell’s Angels. His girlfriend just dumped him, leaving a note in his post office box, and ran off with a gang of unsavory characters.

Spend a little time at the Carp Café. It’s a friendly little place, populated by White’s sharply drawn, good hearted but slightly-off characters. Doris, the proprietress, will ply you with home-baked wonders. Have a fire-fighter martini or two at The End Zone. Get a forty-dollar parking ticket. Stay over at Nancy’s Place, if you’re too tipsy to drive home. There’s an ocean view from every room where you can enjoy a six-pack sunset, almost as beautiful as a tequila sunrise. You’ll be glad you came. You might even decide to stay. White’s novella is as good as it gets. —Marty Malin, author of Grand- mother’s Devil & Other Tempting Tales

 

 

James W. White is a California-based writer of historical and science fiction. He earned an MA in U.S. History. His professional career has included military service, teaching, research librarian and technical writing. He is the author of the novel Borders In Paradise and novellas Ransoms Are For Amateurs and Carp Café. Jim's stories have appeared in Datura Literary Journal, Chronoscope Magazine, The Wapshott Press and Scarlet Leaf Review.

 

Title: Carp Café: A novella
Author: James W. White
Publisher: Adelaide Books
Publisher Website: https://adelaidebooks.org/
Publisher Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
ISBN: 978-1956635928
Price: $19.60
Page Count: 78 pages
Format: Paperback

Description of the company: ADELAIDE BOOKS LLC is a New York based independent company dedicated to publishing literary fiction and creative nonfiction. It was founded in July 2017 as an imprint of the Adelaide Literary Magazine, with the aim to facilitate publishing of novels, memoirs, and collections of short stories, poems, and essays by contributing authors of our magazine and other qualified writers.We believe that in doing so, we best fulfill the mission outlined in Adelaide Magazine – “to promote writers we publish, helping both new and emerging, and established authors reaching a wider literary audience.”

Our motto is: We don’t publish classics, we make classics.

Move Over James Bond. Normanby is Here to Save Us

In case you haven’t already seen the latest James Bond movie, No Time To Die, we won’t give away any spoilers. Needless to say, however, fans have been left with something of a superspy void – at least in the short term.

So, after all the build-up and excitement leading up to Daniel Craig’s last outing as 007, how do we fill the gap that has been left? Who will come and save us all from evil masterminds and foreign agents intent on taking us all down?

The answer may well come in the form of a diminutive, bespectacled bureaucrat, an Intelligence Analyst who is drawn into a dastardly plot to strike at the heart of the UK…

Brand new UK publishing house, Brindle Books Ltd have announced the imminent release of their debut title, a spy thriller with a new take on the classic secret agent format. The company have also released a dramatic book trailer on YouTube to promote the release.

Richard Hinchliffe, the Director of Brindle Books Ltd says: “We’re very excited about the release of our first title, Normanby, by P G Dixon, and we’re sure that the book will provide a much needed fix for spy fans, post-Bond.

“Although, and the book itself is probably better described as an IPCRESS File for the twenty-first century, and the central character differs in many ways from 007,  he is perfectly placed to become an iconic British spy hero.”

Normanby by P G Dixon will be released in eBook form from Amazon, Kobo, Nook and all other good ebook platforms from 12th December 2021. The eBook version is already available for pre-order.  From the same release date, Normanby will also be available in paperback (ISBN: 978-1-7398648-1-1).

For information, please visit www.brindlebooks.co.uk or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

normanby

 

New book by Jonathan Maniscalco

ADELAIDE BOOKS is proud to offer the latest work by Jonathan Maniscalco: Fifteen Stories to Home hitting stores everywhere now. 


Fifteen Stories to Home track the stages people often go through when living abroad. Starting with the high of leaving, the first cracks in that high, the disillusionment with life abroad, and then the appreciation of life there, that is deeper than the rush of travel, and everything else a person feels during the emotional cycle of living abroad and then coming back home.Coming back home is not the same as never leaving. Experiencing life abroad is not just about reaching your destination. It is about the journey itself. It is about pushing your limits beyond your comfort zone. It is about learning. It is about finding yourself. Or as Ralph Waldo Emerson said: “Do not follow where the path may lead. Go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.” Much of it you will find in these Fifteen Stories to Home.


Jonathan Maniscalco has taught English to ESL learners in Japan, Spain, Chile, and New York City. A Massachusetts native, he is a graduate of Boston University and is currently completing a master’s degree at Clark University. Fifteen Stories to Home is his second published short story collection. His first novel, The Dog Star Burned will be published in 2021.


Available on Amazon