Focusing on the exploration of philosophical thought rather than a comprehensive history, this book offers brief insights into the ideas of influential Western philosophers. It aims to spark curiosity and encourage readers to delve deeper into the sources of philosophical concepts, providing a starting point for those new to the subject.
Embracing The World is a collection of philosophic poems, showing the human feelings in all their variety from failure to exultation. Reflecting a huge professional experience of the author, the verses lead the reader to the reminiscent, phantasmagoric world, where the Future is a forgotten Past, the world, where Life confronts us with varied choices between the desires of the heart and the logic of the head. Each poem is a voice of mind, or a heart, or a memory, giving birth into the Future, recalling the Past, and all together they create such an emotional and spiritual poetical stream, which cannot be restricted by any boundaries. These poems tap into the Pool of Enlightenment, from which each reader can quench his or her own self- knowledge.
A Deep Danger is a powerfully realistic, sweeping, exciting and entertaining novel. It offers thoughtful analyses and spins a good yarn, has the intrigue and intellectual adroitness of a thriller, combined with an exquisite lyricism that turns it into a novel that refuses to stay shut. Breathtaking in scope and painfully human, written with passion and controlled power, A Deep Danger is a kind of contemporary novel, which is worth to be read, enjoyed and savored long after the last page is turned.
Edward Schwartz’ scientific mentality and artistic imagination give him the advantage of writing lyrical verses, in which he remains a poet with passionate attachment to philosophy. On the pages of Inside The Rainbow the reader will find the same variety of human feelings, which characterized his two previous collections Kaleidoscope (1998) and Embracing The World (2002).
As a playwright I have the most passionate attachment for the drama thearte because it involves human fate in all its simplicity and grandeur.showing the feelings in all its frenzy, illustrating the havoc it wreaks, bringing out its failuresuch was my intention.I focused the plays on what seemed to me essentialto give the answer the "what is a Human Being?"I also included into this book a small collection of the philosophical fairy tale is to bring a reader "a food for the brain." From another point of viewevery fairy tale is also a small play performed on the stage of life. The main goal of this book is to create a contact between a reader and the writerk, to make a reader one of the characters of a play or a fairy tale.If I succeeded in creation of such unity,it's the writer's royal reward.
Do Not Think About Tomorrow is a richly textured story with memorable characters. This fast-paced novel will move, excite and anger you. There is no main protagonist among personages of this story because the world of crime and drugs crosses all borders. All personages, dead or remained alive, are victims of their weakness, fatal situations, society.The author leads the reader into the thoughts and secret desires of a strangely assorted MARKER, who has never been forced to learn about himself and given up the battle for self-respect;HIS SON DONALD, a forlorn youngster, beating against the walls of his loneliness;SAM ROBSON, a Mafiosi, who pursues the illusion of happiness in his own way;TONY MORICHELLI, a businessman and a Mafia's boss, who inevitably drags to perdition everyone he touches;GENERAL CLARK PATTERSON, a dry pragmatist, whose blunt and irresistible vitality catapults him on the highest steps of the social staircase.These characters and many others are the skeins of the absorbing story, which rises a dramatic climax through the pressure of events and which formulates the author's indictment of the society, in which money prevails over other values and which corrodes lives casually drawn into its orbit.
Set against a backdrop of industrial espionage, the story follows private investigator Bob Stotland and his new partner Ron Barton as they unravel a complex mystery involving stolen Board information and the murders of ballet dancers. As they dig deeper, unexpected twists challenge their assumptions and lead them into a web of intrigue that extends beyond a simple investigation. The characters navigate personal and professional dilemmas, adding depth to this classic whodunit.
Exploring themes of love and connection in later life, the narrative follows a couple navigating the complexities of aging while seeking companionship and intimacy. Through their journey, the characters confront societal perceptions of romance for the elderly, highlighting the importance of emotional bonds and physical affection regardless of age. The story emphasizes that love knows no boundaries and encourages readers to embrace relationships at any stage in life.
Exploring a spectrum of human emotions, this collection of philosophical verses draws inspiration from Eastern "rubayat" poetry. The author’s extensive life and professional experiences shape the poems, inviting readers to navigate their feelings of disappointment and exaltation. It emphasizes the tension between the heart's emotional impulses and the mind's logical reasoning, guiding readers toward reflections on the choices that define their future.
The narrative explores the deep emotional turmoil and complexities of a fractured friendship between a writer, Martin Bell, and a scientist, Harold Flint. Through their contrasting lives and ambitions, Edward Schwartz delves into themes of loyalty, ambition, and the impact of personal choices on relationships, creating a poignant tale of loss and reconciliation.