The Alternations of Our Life’s Seasons: An Astonishing Discovery by George Pan Kouloukis

The moment readers have finished this book, they’ll be able to know whether the years just ahead are good or bad for them, and how long this season will last. They will be able thus to act accordingly: if there is a storm on the horizon, they will take shelter in time; if sunny days loom ahead, they will take advantage before the opportunity passes.

Athens, Greece, April 21, 2013 --(PR.com)-- A new book has been released recently titled The Seasons of Our Lives, and subtitled How Our Lives’ Seasons Alternate from Good to Bad and Vice Versa, and How You Can Benefit from this Knowledge for a Better Life - An Astonishing Discovery.

The moment readers have finished this book, they’ll be able to know whether the years just ahead are good or bad for them, and how long this season will last. They will be able thus to act accordingly: if there is a storm on the horizon, they will take shelter in time; if sunny days loom ahead, they will take advantage before the opportunity passes. This knowledge radically transforms the way we all live today, and helps readers to live a much better life, by taking crucial decisions regarding their career, marriage, family, relationships, and all other life’s issues.

The author, George Pan Kouloukis, a Greek attorney-at-law, a barrister, explains in his book how the seasons of our lives alternate from good to bad ones - and vice versa - according to a certain pattern, based on the way the good and bad seasons have alternated in the lives of lots of famous men and women, whose the biographies he cites in the book.

Great German composer Ludwig van Beethoven, for example, went through a bad period of his life around the age of 32 because he had become totally deaf. Contemplating suicide, he wrote his will. Then, a good season returned. Beethoven overcame his hearing problem, was recognized as one of the greatest composers of all time –he wrote nine insuperable symphonies– and became a celebrated member of Viennese society.

Napoleon provides another example. During a good season of his life, he conquered almost all of Europe, was crowned Emperor of France, and lived a life full of grandeur, triumph, and success. Then a bad season arrived: Napoleon lost all he had achieved, he was defeated at the Battle of Waterloo, and he was exiled ultimately to the remote island of St. Helena.

From the fact that the seasons of our lives alternate from good to bad ones, and vice versa, according to a certain pattern, derives, of course, that we can foresee how our own good and bad seasons will alternate in the future. The author indicates in detail in his book how the seasons will alternate in the future, in every reader’s life, from good to bad ones and vice versa.

To show how the good and bad seasons alternate in our lives, the author cites an impressive list of the biographies, in brief, of the famous people whose lives and seasons he has studied –ranging from Beethoven and Verdi to Picasso and Aristotle Onassis, and from Queen Elizabeth I and King Henry VIII to Winston Churchill and Mikhail Gorbachev. In total, there are 22 biographies. From these biographies, the way the famous people’s seasons alternated is shown in startling clarity.

The book is published by Hearts Space Publications, an Australian publisher, and can be found at Amazon under the words: The Seasons of Our Lives Kouloukis paperback.
Contact
George Pan Kouloukis
George Kouloukis
302100238871
ContactContact
Categories