Conversations with God, Satan and Tom Cruize
CHF 24.95
Probably the book that could start a world war. ‘Conversations’ is an alternative look at reality through the eyes of an unlikely hero. FatMan is a superhero like no other, denser in mind and body than the average human, but more involved in the intimate workings of the universe than any person who has ever lived. The cast includes Satan, God, Tom Cruise, Hitler, Napoleon, Catherine The Great, Vladimir the Impaler, Christ, and FatMan’s wife … the world’s most beautiful woman. It takes a warts and all look at the religions of the world, with a satirical edge that takes no prisoners.
The story is a simple but powerful message… you don’t have to be part of a religious club orchestrated by man to have faith, and the only battle worth fighting for is humanity as a whole; but if you have to fight humanity for humanity’s sake, you’ve lost the war before you started. People fight and kill for many causes such as king or queen, country, nationalism, religion, politics etc, ideals that may at the time seem worth taking a life legally or illegally, but all only lead you further away from what it means to be part of the one and only race that matters. As a surreal alternative look at life, religion, faith, relationships, history and God, the book could be seen as blasphemous by some and hysterical by others. It is just a matter of perspective, but as God invented a sense of humour in the first place, I expect he is laughing his socks off. After all, as he created everything, this book is just a result of his imaginative mind.
Description
Probably the book that could start a world war. ‘Conversations’ is an alternative look at reality through the eyes of an unlikely hero. FatMan is a superhero like no other, denser in mind and body than the average human, but more involved in the intimate workings of the universe than any person who has ever lived. The cast includes Satan, God, Tom Cruise, Hitler, Napoleon, Catherine The Great, Vladimir the Impaler, Christ, and FatMan’s wife … the world’s most beautiful woman. It takes a warts and all look at the religions of the world, with a satirical edge that takes no prisoners.
The story is a simple but powerful message… you don’t have to be part of a religious club orchestrated by man to have faith, and the only battle worth fighting for is humanity as a whole; but if you have to fight humanity for humanity’s sake, you’ve lost the war before you started. People fight and kill for many causes such as king or queen, country, nationalism, religion, politics etc, ideals that may at the time seem worth taking a life legally or illegally, but all only lead you further away from what it means to be part of the one and only race that matters. As a surreal alternative look at life, religion, faith, relationships, history and God, the book could be seen as blasphemous by some and hysterical by others. It is just a matter of perspective, but as God invented a sense of humour in the first place, I expect he is laughing his socks off. After all, as he created everything, this book is just a result of his imaginative mind.