Connected

Connected

We are connected

                                                                                                An interlinked web

                                A matrix of life

                                                                                                                                                We are all connected

We are connected

                                                                                                A flow of energy

                                A vibration

                                                                                                                                                Runs through us all

We are connected

                                                                                                Throbbing protoplasm

                                Touching, caressing

                                                                                                                                                Reliant on each other

We are connected

                                                                                                Radiating out

                                From a single source

                                                                                                                                                Changing, evolving

We are connected

                                A web of consciousness

                                                                                                Permeating the essence

                                                                                                                                                Radiating through

Through rock

                                Gas and liquid

                                                                                                Blood and sap

                                                                                                                                                Leaf, fur and scale.

We are connected

Opher 30.1.2026

Through science I am rediscovering the mystical spirituality I used to believe in back in the 60s. Not a concept of god and certainly not any religion.

It was sparked by a strange scientific paper I read that suggested that consciousness might be an intrinsic quality of the universe right from its creation. Everything was conscious.

It felt like a door opening again. No god creating everything but some spiritual consciousness permeating everything.

It opened the door to all that latent pantheism – the wonder of rocks, stars and planets.

We are all connected. Enjoy.

Phat Bollard – Arseholes

jiggle a box of arseholes and the big ones rise to the top!

Phat Bollard – Arseholes

Spirituality – Is the whole Universe Conscious?

Fortunately I was brought up in a home where religion was not foisted upon me. That’s great. I regard teaching religion to children as child abuse.

As a teenager I went through a questioning/spiritual phase where I started to investigate various religions. I was very interested in mysticism and looked for it in Christianity with mystics like St John of the Cross, in Hinduism, Buddhism, Sufiism and Native American practices. They fascinated me. I had no belief in any god as such but saw spirituality as a force that worked through all of nature.

In later teens I started getting into the Beats and Zen and went along to a Buddhist temple for some meditation.

I became disenchanted. My observations of history and the present led me to conclude that all organised religion was little more than a power structure and vehicle of the state. I despised all its incarnations, saw no evidence for any god and could easily divorce all notions of spirituality from religion. The two were distinct. One good the other horrendous.

One only has to look at the division, hatred, violence and terror created in the name of religion. One only has to look at the hypocrisy and way religion is used to justify all manner of excesses and nastiness to see how awful it is. Religion = cruelty and control. Spirituality = harmony and oneness.

For me spirituality resided in nature and I was completely content being an atheist. I saw no role for any god.

As a scientist I was happy to explain the whole universe in terms of observable phenomena.

There were numerous things that intrigued me. Coincidences occurred. Like with evolution being simultaneously ‘discovered’ in different parts of the world. Like numerous coincidences that sprung up with friends reading the same book, turning up or telephoning etc. I was particularly intrigued by experiments that indicated that photons behaved differently when being observed.

These things could not be easily explained but I put it down to coincidence.

I do like to keep up with science and have been intrigued by quantum physics. Observations such as electron being in two places at the same time fascinate me.

I was very interested in the ideas coming out of latest scientific theories. As a Sci-fi writer I find them extremely energising.

One of the papers I read was concerned with consciousness (one of my pet interests). Is consciousness a product of our brains? How do flies and organisms with little or no brains exhibit consciousness? Many religions have regarded rocks, trees and planets as possessing consciousness. That seemed a little absurd. A branch of Buddhism regarded the brain as a sense organ that ‘sees’ thoughts not the seat of consciousness but an observer of it.

That intrigues me.

This paper proposed that consciousness was inherent in our universe. It was either created with it or was responsible for its creation. Not a god but an inherent force that operated through all matter and was not restricted to living things.

Maybe.

Here’s what Copilot came up with:

ArgumentCore ClaimWhy It Supports a Conscious Universe
Mind–Body ProblemConsciousness can’t be reduced to matterConsciousness must be fundamental
Teleological CosmopsychismUniverse shows goal‑directed behaviorSuggests mind-like structure
Anthropic ArgumentUniverse fine‑tuned for consciousnessConsciousness may be built-in
Consciousness Field TheoryConsciousness precedes matterUniverse is fundamentally conscious
Galileo’s ErrorScience excluded consciousnessReintegrating it may require cosmic consciousness
Emergence ArgumentConsciousness arises from universeUniverse must contain proto-consciousness

The Meaning of Life

Having lived a long life I have had time to think and review. These are my thoughts on what constitutes a worthwhile existence:

a. I find it admirable for a person to spend their life in the realms of creativity – dance, writing, drama, poetry, art, design and music.

b. I find it highly worthy to spend one’s life helping others, in caring professions – education, nursing, care, medicine, charitable work and surgery

c. I think it fulfilling to spend life in exploration, discovery, science and adventure

d. I would find it worthwhile to spend life in close harmony with nature

e. I would see the worth in reading, introspection and research

f. I think every life should have room for passion and appreciation of the arts

g. I even think there is a place for personal spiritual exploration

h. I can see the value of love of family and the joy of relationship

What I despise is a shallow life based on the acquisition of wealth, the endless pursuit of sex and pleasure, the joy of destruction or violence, the drudgery of routine existence, the seeking of status and social standing, the vacuousness of mundane entertainment and the horror of organised religion.

For while all life, to quote Roy Harper’s words, is meaningless meaning, and ultimately has no purpose, every second is precious; the universe is wondrous and our time is short. Making the most of it seems the imperative.

A worthwhile life is surely worth striving for?

To spend time in trivia is a great waste.

Life has meaning if we choose to use it wisely.

The Cleansing – Chapter 1

This is the sequel to JudgementJudgement: Amazon.co.uk: Forsythe, Ron: 9798267858489: Books -I do like writing Sci-fi that is grounded in social context and relevant to life today. I’m an idealist, a dreamer and a critic.

Chapter 1 – The Separation

‘Ron Forsythe, I duly pronounce you ‘Protector of the Planet’.

‘What the fuck??? You gotta be kidding!!’

A ball of blue oceans girdled with cotton wool, clouds in spiralling masses, continents in darker tones, forests of green and deserts of brown; the polar regions stark caps of white reflecting light into the heavens. The thin atmosphere a fragile luminous band that glows in outline against an endless inky blackness speckled with flecks of white sparkling crystal. A delicate biosphere an oasis, suspended in the infinite reaches of a heartless eternity; the intricate chemistry of life sustained only by this narrow band of air and water.

On the dark side of the planet clusters of lights mark the cities, each with diverging tendrils of light, zig-zagging  here and there, indicating  the presence of transport corridors – the most obvious signs of intelligent life.

The intelligent beings that created these cities and thoroughfares, thinking themselves so big, swelled with self-importance, feel themselves to be immune to the vagaries of the cosmos. These tiny beings teem across the surface of the planet like a bacterial infection on the skin of a peach; yet they reach for the stars and sing to the moon. They believe all knowledge and mystery will be theirs for the asking. They tempt the fates and play dice with Armageddon. They are a danger to themselves and every organism that breathes the air of Earth. They know not what they do.

The reality was that life was fragile. It could be snuffed out in an instant. These beings were complacent. They just did not realise how fragile it was. Not just the thinness of that blue line but above it – the ominous presence of the giant H-craft Quorma.

Commander Chameakegra sat in her central position on the bridge of the H-craft Neff, her crest and scutes flowing with blue waves of pleasure. Everything was right with the universe. Ostensibly she was relaxed, surveying the planet Hydra looming through the viewport below them. The Judgement was over and she had been fully vindicated. Once again her assessment had been spot on and her unorthodox methods had proved effective. Much to her satisfaction and to Beheggakegri’s chagrin, and many others in the top echelons at UFOR (the United Federation of Races) the Judge had not only backed her assessment but also agreed with her solution.

On the surface of her coloured integument Commander Chameakegra’s disposition appeared serene. Inside was a different tale. All around her the crew were bustling, gathering evidence. Chameakegra was the eye of the silent hurricane around which everything rotated. Her job was not over yet. Ever since the judgement she had been preparing, working out how to carry out her instructions.

There were many other issues for her to address, battles to be fought. Chameakegra was aware that Beheggakegri and many other elements of UFOR would be more than happy for her ‘crazy’ idea to fail. In their opinion the exercise was complex and unnecessary. It was far simpler to eradicate a suspect race rather than take a risk that they might contaminate the Federation. Chameakegra took a very different view. For her the Hydran culture had immense positive attributes that could greatly enhance the Federation. The risk was worthwhile. She was immensely pleased that Judge Booghramakegra had agreed with her. Now was the test. She had to put her plan into operation and ensure it succeeded. A different vedog of mertles.

They had to invade, take over without bloodshed and set about overhauling the governance and infrastructure of the Hydrans – nothing too hard to handle but none-the-less requiring detailed planning. Then there was the tiny issue of what to do with the Hydrans selected for excision. For Beheggakegri that was simple; they could be removed and painlessly disposed of just as would be the case with any extermination.

Chameakegra felt differently. She was not content with winning the judgement and reprieve for the Hydrans, her thoughts were taking her further down the bojirt hole of wonder. Perhaps these malevolent Hydrans weren’t lost causes? Perhaps, like the rest of the population, they too could be rehabilitated? Weren’t the Federation meant to be compassionate? Shouldn’t they set a higher moral tone than simply going for what was safe and convenient? Beheggakegri did not appear to agree.

For the moment an uneasy truce existed. Chameakegra had been instructed to separate the Hydrans into three distinct categories – Saved, Reprogrammed and Exterminated – hard enough to know where to draw the boundaries. She had to go along with that for now but there was plenty plasma to flow through those tubes. There was plenty of time to mess with those boundaries and outcomes. Further experiments on Hydran psychology might well provide better solutions. Best to keep her laser shielded for now.

Right now Chameakegra alternated between brooding and fuming, taking care to keep her emotions under control so that her crest and scutes flowed with the orange hues of command. The last thing she wanted was for the crew to sense her anger. No hint of white was to be visible on those scales. Chameakegra was resolute. She was aware that Beheggakegri, and probably the majority of the UFOR committee, viewed this whole exercise as a great act of folly. Normally the business would be done and cleansed; the Hydrans would have been quickly and painlessly removed and the biosphere of Hydra left to heal and plug the gap left. In a million years or so evolution might well have produced a superior, more stable intelligence to take the place of these psychotic apes. Nature would restore. In the big scheme of things the Hydrans would be no great loss.

Chameakegra had come to see the established process as a cold, calculated bureaucratic exercise lacking in compassion and totally inflexible. In her mind there had to be a better way. If the Federation was to live up to the values it claimed to uphold there had to be a superior doctrine to this harsh judgement and terrible heartless euthanasia. But, for now, she was a lone voice.

Chameakegra prepared herself for the battles to come. For now she had to be content with the victory she had won. The comulators were programmed and staff assigned to the task they had been presented with. The novelty caused equal amounts of perplexity, amusement and interest. The assessment team had been set to go home; now they were reassigned. A number had been rotated but the core had opted to stay. That indicated a pleasing high morale.

The Hydrans were safe for a while. There was to be no absolute cleansing. The judgement was clear on that. They had a stay of execution and an opportunity to prove themselves worthy.

Normally, following a judgement, her role would be over. Not this time. She had created her own problems. Now she was tasked with solving them. Not that she was unhappy with that. It was what she had wanted. She relished the opportunity. This was something different. It presented numerous intricate assessments that required all the resources of the Neff.

The Hydran culture might, for the time being, be secure due to her efforts but there were repercussions. Elements of Hydran society were to be identified and extracted. Chameakegra had been tasked with dealing with this unusual situation. That felt appropriate, after all, this had been her idea and the Neff, set up as an observation/assessment laboratory was ideally suited for the task. That did not make the problems easy to solve. It was quite one thing to come up with a good sounding solution during the judgement. It was quite another to put it into practice.

She sat on the bridge of the Neff feeling contented. Chameakegra loved solving problems. Inside her head the neural pathways were glowing with electricity. She had turned the mighty resources of the Neff into a different, more detailed, processor of data. They were no longer assessing the worth of a whole culture, now they were doing something that had never been done before – judging the individuals, the whole population. Hydrans were being categorised and placed in various groups according to their nature. It required a more intimate knowledge of their lives.

Instead of one judgement there were to be eight billion judgements. Fortunately, under the guidance of skilled staff, coupled with the immense amount of data available from Hydra’s own media, the comulating skills of Neff’s automated intelligence was able to perform the task.

Rites and ceremonies

37. Rites and ceremonies

Death has always been a big thing. Every culture has its rites and ceremonies – often quite elaborate. We humans are full of our own self-importance. We like to leave a mark.

We only have to look at the pyramids, Sphinx, dolmens, cairns, monuments and that incredible terracotta army. What were they all thinking? Did they somehow believe that they could leave a mark in this world and somehow live forever?

Yes, we all do.

We take our photos, record our videos, paint and write.

I write.

My books will live longer than me but they too will die. Probably pretty quickly.

We cannot escape it and none of us are important enough to live forever, not even the greatest artists or religious leaders. Jesus, Buddha, Confuscious, Picasso, Dali, Murakami, Asimov and Stephen King will all one day be totally forgotten. All their works will have ceased to exist. There will not be a single word, dab of paint or prayer left blowing in the wind.

All gone. Forgotten. Pointless.

Doesn’t stop us though does it?

I still write.

We hate pointless. We defy pointless. We embrace pointless and yet still do it.

We are human.

The Book of DEATH: Amazon.co.uk: Goodwin, Ophe Opher, Goodwin, Opher: 9798294533908: Books

Death can wait another day.

29. Death can wait another day.

I used to think I wouldn’t live past forty. Live fast; burn out. It doesn’t work like that. I guess I thought that life wasn’t worth living past forty. What was the point? I wouldn’t want to go on. But I tell you, life is always worth living. You never reach a point where you want it over (at least I haven’t yet).

I’ve done more since I turned sixty than I did in the whole rest of my life before that.

Here I am at seventy-five. No sign of death. My blood pressure’s a bit up. My cholesterol level was raised. I developed type 2 diabetes. But, I changed my diet and lost twenty pounds. I take a few pills and hey presto everything is good.

My right hip aches sometimes but we walked five miles yesterday. No pain. I’m not in bad shape.

My eye-sight is OK. I have to wear glasses. One cataract op and another looming for next Wednesday. Can’t say I’m looking forward to that op, I don’t like the thought of someone rummaging around inside my eye, but if it keeps my eyesight functioning I’m OK with that.

I still enjoy driving and am happy to drive long distances. I want to drive around Europe!

I’m still writing about music.

Death can wait another day. I’ve got plans.

The Book of DEATH: Amazon.co.uk: Goodwin, Ophe Opher, Goodwin, Opher: 9798294533908: Books

How would I like to die?

Extract from the Book of DEATH

  1. How would I like to die?

So how would I like to die?

Peaceably in my sleep like my grandfather – not screaming and terrified like his passengers.

Well yes. I would prefer to die peaceably in my sleep without any long drawn out illness. I do not relish pain or the fear that comes from having to confront the end of everything. I’ve watched people going through the process of dying. It is not pleasant but perhaps, perversely, it is worse for the spectators? The dying person can become reconciled to the process.

Heart failure is the best – at around three in the morning just after completing a pleasant set of dreams. The heart stops and the oxygen supply dries up – the brain shuts down. The various other tissues and organs follow suit in order of their oxygen requirements. I think the skin is the last to go – days later. That’s why you have to shave corpses.

If not heart failure then walking into a room full of nitrogen would do the trick. I wouldn’t notice anything until I suddenly passed out as my brain shuts down through lack of oxygen. As our bodies have no way of assessing the oxygen levels in our blood I would suffer no symptoms. I would simply suddenly lose consciousness without any distress. Sounds good to me. Why don’t they use that method for capital punishment? Much more humane than the electric chair, shooting or hanging? Why don’t they use it in abattoirs? It would remove all that grisly stunning and bloodletting. I’m sure animals would be less terrified and the people carrying it out would find it preferable.

A nitrogen death would suit me.

Failing that a catastrophic brain haemorrhage might be a good contender for a good death, or an unexpected bullet in the back of the head, like in the Sopranos, or being at ground zero in a nuclear explosion. But I don’t want to know it’s coming.

I’d prefer not to feel pain or suffer the long drawn-out process of dying. I want it quick, painless and without much elongated thinking!

The Book of DEATH: Amazon.co.uk: Goodwin, Ophe Opher, Goodwin, Opher: 9798294533908: Books

The Counter Culture

The Counter Culture

By the time I was fourteen/fifteen in 1964/5 I was starting to feel very dissatisfied and trapped. I’d enjoyed a very liberal upbringing with plenty of freedom and no indoctrinating religion or politics. I’d spent my childhood running wild in the countryside with the trees and wildlife. All pretty ideal. Then hormones had kicked in. It was the 60s. Beatles, Stones, Beat groups and girls.

I felt as if I was caught up in some competitive machine, weighed down by expectations. I was being pushed through the exam machine. You competed. You took your ‘O’ Levels and was shunted along. Those that made the grade moved to the next level. The chaff dropped out to a life of factories or trades, apprenticeships and ‘working with their hands’. Those that made the grade were shuffled into the sixth form for vaunted ‘A’ Levels and, if you made the grade, on to universities and careers.

It was a game I was loathe to play. I was regularly getting into trouble at school for hair and uniform infringements coupled with poor attitude. Canings, reprimands and being sent home were becoming regular. School was more of a social event for me – hanging with like-minded lads, chatting to the girls, talking music, sorting out parties, gigs and the weekend. Without consciously making any decision I wasn’t playing the game. My parents were concerned but did not intervene. We had talks.

By the age of fifteen I’d begun to appraise their life. Mum was a housewife. She was bored to death and had no purpose. Dad worked on newspapers in London. He got up at six thirty, left home by seven thirty, commuted to London, came home at six thirty, ate, sat in the sitting room, read the papers (all the papers – it was his job) and watched the news. At ten he went to bed. Repeat for six days. On Sunday he had a lie-in, mowed the grass and occasionally went to the pub for a pint before our Sunday roast. They had a ‘nice’ suburban life on a ‘nice’ housing estate with a ‘nice’ bungalow, a ‘nice’ car and a comfortable life. They’d just been through a war; seen friends killed and were probably traumatised. That life probably seemed ideal. It was what they had aspired to.

It wasn’t what I aspired to. It shrieked boring. It screamed pointless. It looked like death warmed up.

The system churned and I felt I was caught up in this sausage machine. But I had my music, friends, girls and rebellion.

Then, at around sixteen, I read Kerouac – first ‘On The Road’ and more importantly ‘Dharma Bums’. A whole new world opened up and it was a world that appealed to my hormone-drenched mind – girls, jazz, wild clubs, adventure, crazy friends, poetry, marijuana, road trips and an underlying quest for meaning, purpose, satori, understanding and fulfilment. Yes please! This was more like it!

By sixteen I was becoming more and more aware of the politics of the world – the haves and have-nots, the social hierarchy, the threat of nuclear war and the cold war games (we’d lived through the Cuban crisis and all that brinkmanship between Kennedy and Khrushchev). We lived under this constant threat of annihilation.

In those days in the mid-sixties Dylan seemed to be articulating all those concerns and fears – nuclear war, racism, inequality and the political/social madness we were in. I’d discovered Ginsberg and adopted ‘Howl’. It seemed to express the insanity I felt myself to be swept along in. Then I started reading Burroughs which thoroughly confused me with his narcotic nightmares yet seemed to make sense. Then I discovered Henry Miller.

School seemed pretty irrelevant. I had a motorbike and started hitting the London clubs. The sixties was taking off. The underground scene was starting up. I had friends introducing me to Blues, Folk, Psychedelia and like a sponge I was soaking it up. Life was fun. With my wild mates we were doing our own Kerouac. I saw myself as Sal Paradise. School saw me as a pain in the arse. Parents were worried.

Then, at seventeen, I discovered Roy Harper. I’d already got into Bert Jansch, John Renbourn and Jackson C Frank but that first Harper album blew me away. More importantly his rambling gigs connected. Then the second album and ‘Circle’ seemed to put into words exactly what I was feeling.

For me the sixties was a magic period in which I lived the life I had dreamed of and felt completely free. I’d scraped into college in London and had no ties. I’d found my life partner and was madly in love. Life was perfect. Three Harper gigs a week, access to every band under the sun, a group of crazy friends, a range of underground clubs, books to read, music to absorb. I was living the dream. I was Sal Paradise and I was, like an Arthurian knight, on a quest for purpose, adventure and meaning. I too was seeking that Zen burst of satori. Life was a mad experiment.

Through the late sixties and seventies Roy Harper seemed to articulate the way I was feeling about life and society. With songs like McGoohan’s Blues, I Hate The Whiteman, Me and My Woman, The Game, The Lord’s Prayer and many more he put into words the discontent we were feeling.

The underground scene was an expression of what became known as the counter culture. I gravitated towards it. I didn’t get into any heavy politics or religion, though many did. The counter culture was more of an attitude. We dropped out of the game. We were no longer playing for the wealth and status. We weren’t hankering after the big house, trophy wife and big limo. That game felt hollow. We did not believe that the establishment (state and church) held any purpose or value. It was merely a warmongering power game. It seemed to me that I’d be a lot happier living a simpler life with a higher morality and values – put simply – love, friendship, equality and sharing, a life that was more in tune with nature and spirituality.

Society with its patriotism, nationalism, racism, xenophobia, wars, hypocritical religion and corrupt politics seemed to have no relevance to my life. I rejected it. I felt myself to be part of an international fraternity, a brotherhood/sisterhood and a new world. We shared different values, different drugs, different lifestyles and different aspirations. Above all, we rejected the corrupt, hypocritical values of the society we were part of. It was all phony.

It was all very idealistic. The counter culture existed in parallel. We had our own society and values. We had our own newspapers – OZ and IT. We recognised each other on sight and shared. We were all on the road.

Of course, reality intruded. Our social leaders tended to be musicians and political firebrands who sold out and opted in. Big business moved in and commercialised rebellion. Making a living undermined freedom – the need for somewhere to live and something to eat required money. Eastern spirituality was just as iffy as Christianity. Having babies tied us down. Nuclear war was universal; you couldn’t exist separate to a war. Dreams of equality for gender and race were just dreams. So we compromised.

Some of us went into politics to try to improve the system. Some of us (like me) went into education to attempt to instil ‘better’ values into the next generation. Some did other things. Some dropped out altogether and tried living off the land.

The counter culture became a rear-guard action as we continued to espouse our values and freedoms while living inside the machine.

Perhaps the counter culture exists in our heads?

The Book of Death

Contents

Dedications

Introduction

  1. The present – I am dying
  2. The final frontier
  3. Which of the three biggest killers is most likely to get me?
  4. How would I like to die?
  5. The social taboo of death
  6. A culture terrified of death
  7. Can you have a dignified death?
  8. An Irish Wake
  9. How to die 2
  10. When are we dead?
  11. The sequence of my death
  12. Karma
  13. How am I doing at sixty-seven?
  14. Dying inside? Yes!
  15. Sam my dog
  16. Anecdote – reporting my death
  17. Seventy-four
  18. Downsizing
  19. Writing the Death Diaries
  20. The elderly lady and Hat
  21. Reassessment
  22. I’m still not dead
  23. Downsizing – We did it!
  24. Life and creativity
  25. Which killer?
  26. Still waiting
  27. From beyond the grave
  28. Which of us will go first?
  29. Life goes on
  30. Fit and healthy
  31. Death can wait another day
  32. So what have I got to live for?
  33. Liz’s burial wishes
  34. Leaving my body to medical science
  35. Too old
  36. Deaths of friends
  37. Rites and ceremonies
  38. Guides for death
  39. Death of a parent
  40. Legacies
  41. Current situation
  42. Indecision
  43. Present day – death of politics
  44. Cunning plans for the future
  45. Cataracts
  46. Being an old man
  47. We are all dying
  48. Reflections
  49. What happens after death?
  50. When we are dead?
  51. Medical science
  52. Lessons from a long life
  53. Death rituals – Bali
  54. Religious ceremonies
  55. Spiritualism
  56. Air burials
  57. Life after death
  58. State of health update
  59. Death is natural – We are programmed in our DNA
  60. Mexico – The Day of the Dead
  61. What actually will happen as we die
  62. Benefits of being old
  63. This book is frustrating – I’m still here!
  64. Epitaphs
  65. Where does it lead?
  66. Post death revelations
  67. Celebration of my life
  68. Death of my Dad
  69. Enjoying the sun
  70. More death rituals
  71. Life after death
  72. Mum and spiritualism
  73. Egocentric solipsism and other death philosophies
  74. My Mum’s death
  75. Lies
  76. Souls, spirits and essence
  77. Spirituality
  78. How am I doing at seventy-six?
  79. The existentials – Sartre, De Beauvois and Camus
  80. Quantum Death
  81. Fast or slow?
  82. Death Cleaning
  83. The Native American girl on the Greyhound Bus
  84. Assisted dying
  85. Thanks for DEATH!
  86. What’s going to happen to me?
  87. Perhaps there is no death after all?
  88. This could be the last time! May be the last time, I don’t know.
  89. Deathbed regrets
  90. How is this book going to end?

The Book of DEATH: Amazon.co.uk: Goodwin, Ophe Opher, Goodwin, Opher: 9798294533908: Books