From the world of spirit comes this startling sliver of history no one has ever recorded. It is a story of endings, of lost splendor, and a love that would not die. A fully channeled work, the story begins with a vision. It is the year 214 AD, the beginning of an epoch of slavery, leprosy, and crucifixions in the city of Luxor. It marks the last of everything Egyptian, including its mystical priesthood and the gods of the pharaohs, a story achingly rendered by Lukhamen’s son, the author’s spirit guide.
This is a visual voyage into the past, a time when Egypt, the most glorious civilization on the face of the earth, was savagely looted and ravaged by the Roman Empire. As if that atrocity weren’t enough, the Romans, not content with Egypt’s land and treasures, sought to erode its very soul, erase every remnant and memory of its glorious past. And all for one thing—wheat. Bread for the Roman army.
Helen Delaney is a former diplomat who served as First Secretary and as the Standards Expert in the United States Mission to the European Union in Brussels.
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