by George Noory, William J. Birnes
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Product Description
George R. Noory is the host of America’s top late-night radio talk show, Coast to Coast AM, which is broadcast to more than 500 radio stations in the U.S. and Canada and streamed over the Internet to millions of people each night. Noory truly believes that there are forces, both good and evil, at work on Earth, forces that can be harnessed by human beings. Fueled by a transcending experience at a very young age, Noory turned his life into an investigation of the possibilities and influence of such forces, and how we can use them to enhance our lives. Now George Noory has woven his life’s work into both an amazing memoir and a miraculous key that you can use to unlock the secret of your own sensual transcendence and liberate your limitless potential. Through Worker in the Light, George Noory will show readers how to:
*Unlock the secrets to unlimited spiritual growth*Transcend all doubts and fears*Shatter the prison walls of their five senses*Deploy the power of intuition to see the future*Free themselves from the confines of time*Facilitate the power of lucid dreaming Through easily understood, step-by-step instructions, and examples from his own life, George Noory shows you how he has surpassed his own limitations and frustrations, how he has freed himself from doubts and fears, and how he glimpsed the right way out of life’s desperate straits. He will teach you how you, too, can overcome fear and doubt and find happiness and success. By the end of this book, you will no longer be alone. You, too, will be a worker in the light.
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Average Customer Review:
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
George Snoory..., 2008-12-01 I am a long time listener to Coast to Coast Am and over the past three years I have noticed a change in George Noory as a host. It's as if he is getting more elementary and overly simple minded. It's as if he has forgotten all of the knowledge he has been exposed to from the guests he has had on over the years. The questions he asks are as if he knows nothing of the esoteric. The show is becoming more about him then about his guests.
This book is a fine example of this. I agree with the majority of these reviews, this book was certainly written for promoting himself as a personality. I am really tired of him continually reminding us of his late aunt Shafica Karagulla too. Yawn.
My guess is he is playing it so safe to keep his job, that he has become boring and dull. Hence this fluff filled wordy book supposedly written by George Noory.
If this Catholic good boy is an intuitive, remote viewing, time traveler and thinks he has the authority to teach such subjects, then I am a hamster coo coo ca choo.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
Interesting, 2008-11-26 After having waited so long to obtain this book, I was slightly disappointed. I listen to Mr. Noorys show every night I can, and maybe it is the fact that I have heard this all before that left me feeling a little let down. I am avidly awaiting his next book. His message is universal and should be in the front of how we all treat not only ourselves but how we treat others. Bravo
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
Redundant and Exhausting, 2008-07-10 This book could have been about one hundred pages shorter. I cannot count the number of times I noticed I was reading a new paragraph which contained pretty much the SAME information already covered in some other paragraph. This goes on endlessly. It's exhausting. In the end, did I learn anything? Maybe simply that naked aliens could be mining on the dark side of the moon, but other than that? Not really.
As an aside, it startled me to learn that George Noory gave himself over to the "dark side" as he called it, and so recently. Just eight years ago he conducted an experiment in which he wished serious harm on certain men of whom he was jealous. Harm came to them, and then doubled back on Noory, which is apparently when it occurred to him that he should stop. Noory is a man in his 50s! I guess I could look past it more easily if he'd been a teen playing such hurtful games with people's lives, but he was a mature man. I just have a hard time accepting anything "enlightening" from someone who could do this to other people, and so recently.
I do not recommend this book.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
waste of money, 2008-03-06 I thought the book be good ,but found out I wasted my money ,dont buy this book... I wouldnt of gave it a one star rating, but that was the lowest i could do
11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
There is no way George Noory could have written this book., 2008-02-21 I read the better part of this book at the bookstore, while waiting a few minutes for my car to be serviced. Yes, it's that fluffy of a read. But let's be honest, there is no way that George Noory could have written this book, or any other book.
I have been listening to C2C for years, and I honestly think that Mr. Noory may be in the early stages of dementia. Seriously. His word selection is increasingly limited. Over time, he has begun to choose simpler and simpler words all the time to express himself. He repeats the same cliches and aphorisms over and over. (such as "I don't believe in coincidences"). He verbally muddles through the news update segment at the beginning of the show every single night, crossing up words, dropping syllables, putting strange, random emphasis on the wrong word or syllable. As a subscriber to the podcast, I have hours of mp3 files to back this up. He asks his guests questions that are so irrelevant to the topic and out of step with the narrative, that they respond with long, awkward pauses of apparent disbelief. He blurts out unsolicited medical advice, including a recent show where he even recommended a prescription drug to a listener by name, after hearing a ten second medical history. This shows a serious lack of impulse control and judgement, which is a hallmark of frontal lobe dementia. He increasingly reports doing absent minded things and having accidents, such as "falling into a giant puddle of water" in Austin. He is at exactly the right age to be experiencing the onset of frontal lobe dementia or perhaps early Alzheimers. He needs to get help, for sure. And if he isn't in the early stages of dementia, then he has to be drinking enough before the show to impair his thinking and speech. Either way, he needs to seek help or retire, or both. But I seriously think it's dementia. Mr. Noory if you are reading this please get an MRI and a SPECT scan from a reputable neurologist right away, and be prepared for the worst.

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