Faraway Laughter
Author Jeffrey Thornton combines theoretical physics, computer technology, and sensory deprivation with the metaphysical concepts of karma, multiple lives, and the illusion of time to form a truly unique and compelling thriller.
Deep in the mountains of northern Georgia lies a secret invention based on cutting-edge theoretical physics. It is the Regression System, a computer-driven sensory deprivation tank that alters the frequency of human consciousness allowing the user’s mind to step into a body it inhabited in a past life.
But the system has psychological side effects so great that it has driven team member Lane Godfrey into insanity. And now Lane has disappeared with the software, his sights set on his next target – child psychologist Sloan Fischer, a woman on the brink of finding out a secret that would land him in prison.
Hoping to sidestep karmic retribution, Lane uses the system to go back in time to provoke Sloan into killing him in a previous life thus karmicly justifying her murder in present day. Sloan’s only hope is her estranged husband, Jason, the only person that runs in her circle of souls.
To keep this madman from changing the course of his wife’s fate, Jason must step back into his own past lives and counteract Lane’s manipulations of violence and betrayal. But to save Sloan, he must first face the subconscious fears that have shaped his own destiny.
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What Readers Are Saying
Feedback and reviews from readers
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wow, give this book a chance, it’s worth it
This book is an eye opener. If you are into metaphysical ideology, meditation, and awakening to one’s true self, but are sick of all the self help style books on the subject and want a real change of pace then this book is for you. It is exciting and action packed like a good thriller style novel, but with deeper messages that really make you ponder what we really are, why we are here, and what happens. There were a few times during the book where it is a bit slower than others, not many, and they are early in the book, but stick with it. Once you get a good third of the way into the book you will be totally hooked, and the payoff is well worth it.
Timmy G
Amazon Review
I was very surprised by how much I enjoyed this book. (I’ve read it twice already)
This is a story of a man, Jason, trying to protect his soul mate, Sloan, from being killed in her past lives by a psychopath. The details and lessons the author puts in the story during Jason’s many past life regressions are deep and valuable.
With each of his five regressions, Jason begins to understand and embody what the true meaning of life is all about. He learns love and compassion are the ultimate answer. A love of life, a love of self and a compassion toward everyone.
He begins to understand that people themselves create their own misery or personal hell. Your thoughts are what define you and your life.
Anyone who is open minded, looking for truth and has enjoyed reading books like, “Conversations With God”, “Many Lives, Many Masters”, “Excuse Me, Your Life is Waiting” will love Faraway Laughter.
Give Faraway Laughter a chance. You’ll have a good time, learn a lot and feel good about yourself.
XKAL
Amazon Review
5.0 out of 5 stars
A skillfully constructed and compulsively readable novel
I was hooked the minute I read the copy on the back of the book. I read the book in one sitting, and thought finally! A book with a sophisticated metaphysical world view that is also written superbly and plotted so deftly it is impossible to put down. Tell your friends, because Jeffrey Thornton should be read!
Kindle Customer
Amazon Review
TUESDAY STARTED READING YOUR BOOK. DID NOT WANT TO PUT IT DOWN. BY WEDNESDAY MORNING WAS DONE. FANTASTIC BOOK; SHOULD BE REQUIRED READING FOR EVERYONE, ESPECIALY STUDENTS OF NEW AGE STUDIES. HAD A LOT OF INFO AND GAVE GOOD EXAMPLES OF WHAT WAS MEANT BY SO MANY TERMS WE ALL USE. DESCRIPTIONS WERE VERY VIVID. DID NOT WANT FOR IT TO END. MR THORNTON YOU ARE ONE HELL OF AN AUTHOR.
David Jones
Amazon Review
Excerpt From Faraway Laughter
Alia’s eyes glowed in the candlelight as she sat peacefully, motionless, twelve inches in front of his face. She rested her wrists on her knees with her hands palms up and touching the tips of her middle fingers to the tips of her thumbs. Jason looked into her eyes and, after a few moments, the rest of her face and body became blurry. He could see every detail in her eyes, beautiful blue, icy blue, with darker flecks near the center. After several minutes, her body faded away into obscurity and, as he stared at her eyes, a pinkish light glowed in his peripheral vision.
“You’re a nine,” she said so suddenly and quietly that it startled him out of the trance.
“I’m a nine?” he said, wondering if I heard her correctly.
“Nines always have a distinctive karmic agenda.”
“Are you saying nine, as in the number?”
“Yes.” She was quiet again for a moment. “A lot of times, I see extreme levels of self-hatred in nines. But you can make huge leaps in growth. It’s a real opportunity for the soul. But it’s a challenge. Your challenges in life started early.”
Tell me something I don’t know, he thought as his mother’s funeral popped into his mind. It was really never far away. He’d been seven, his sister ten. They were living in Dunwoody. Back then it was considered to be on the outskirts of Atlanta just like everything that was outside the Perimeter. His father was the minister at Presbyterian Providence. He had a large congregation and did the funeral himself, all dressed up in fancy church purple and a martyr’s mask, and accepted condolences as if they were birthday presents for him alone to open and savor.
It was the Everlasting Gobstopper of memories: his mind could chew on it forever and it never got any smaller. But, instead of a sweet tart like center, this little candy was filled with pain and resentment.
“Am I supposed to be doing something?” Jason asked, the bitter taste of the memory made fresh again.
“Just relax and try to open yourself up.”
He didn’t know what that meant and he was tired of staring at her so he closed his eyes and listened to the music, the chanting. Soon, thoughts were buzzing through his head, thoughts that he didn’t necessarily want any part of. He knew he should be looking for a new job. He knew he should be at home getting his life together. Money was running out and he had bills to pay, some of which he had been ignoring for a couple of months now. Collection notices wouldn’t be far off. If he didn’t do something about them soon, his utilities would start getting shut off. And he hadn’t even started looking. The thought of another computer support job made him physically sick, made him want to pull the hair right out of his head, but unemployment made him a worthless human being.
He opened his eyes and found Alia still staring at him. He could feel his face twitch.
“Your energy is like a thunderstorm. You’re just so… chaotic inside.”
Jason didn’t respond.
“Take a deep breath,” she said and breathed deeply expecting him to mirror her. After several deep inhales, she said, “Better. Now think of something you love. And picture it in your mind, don’t let it go. Don’t let any other thoughts keep you from it.”
He nodded and searched his mind. What did he love? His painting came to mind and he focused on it, saw it in his mind: the semi transparent face of the woman, stuck between crying and smiling, the demons that haunt her thoughts floating beneath her. But then that voice popped up inside his mind, that familiar voice that told him it was pointless. Pointless because no one would ever see it, ever appreciate it. It was a waste of time. It told him that he should be doing what everyone else does. That he should forget about painting and focus on working, on building a career, because he would never amount to anything as an artist. He was just fooling himself, distracting himself from the problems that tore his life apart.
Alia opened her eyes after what seemed like an eternity, a long series of numbers scribbled on her pad of paper, sighed, and smiled weakly at him. “Are you okay?” she asked softly.
He nodded.
She eyed him for a moment. “Your perception of yourself is always in accord with your experience.”
Jason, not knowing what to say, shrugged and said, “Thanks.” Then, “I think I’ll go out for a cigarette.”
Jason walked out of the barn into the wet darkness and lit a cigarette trying not to feel what the session with Alia had brought forth. Tears filled his eyes, the night around him turning streaked and blurry. He breathed in the smoke, gritted his teeth, and pushed his thoughts down under a thick layer of scar tissue, the feelings sinking into the pit of his stomach. They would grow roots there, in his stomach and in his soul. They would eat away at both. But at least that’d be later. And later was always good.
Smoke billowed up, filtered by the bare limbs of the trees that crowded the barn, and into the breeze where it was swept away into the slate black night. The air was cold but smelled good, smelled woody, smelled naked for some reason. He found himself listening to the forest’s sounds, the voice of the breeze, and soon it seemed to want to talk to him, to tell him something. He could guess what it would say and shook his head to clear his ears. He would not listen, no. He would not listen.
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