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  • Book cover of Psychedelic Visions from the Teacher
    Bruce Morton

     · 2013

    For 15 years, Neuroscientist Bruce Morton, used psychedelic compounds to explore inner space. There, the temporary neurochemical death of his ego allowed him to transcend into the presence of someone pure and holy who was much superior to his normal intelligence. Visions from this Teacher initiated him into the multiple levels of reality and caused him to reformulate the nature of the universe, life, mind, and spirituality into a superior data-based format. Professor Morton has called this Teacher-inspired wisdom, Neuroreality. Its transformational context, bridging brain and mind, science and religion is the topic of this book.

  • Book cover of Forgottonia
    Bruce Morton

     · 2013

    Forgottonia is a photography book by Bruce Morton. Forgottonia is the nickname for the several counties in far west central Illinois that Bruce has concentrated his lens on. The images show the traditional farming community near his hometown of Bowen, Illinois. Bruce sensitive images document the cycle of life, the birth and deaths, small town parades, auctions, homes sold and lost, the farmland in various seasons, and the people who live and work in this area. The introduction is written by photographer Aline Smithson, and is quoted here: "Forgottonia is about looking at familiar places and people with a renewed interest and appreciation for a lifestyle grounded in traditions and routines. Bruce Morton's photographs and text take notice of simple gestures of place, celebrating the common and the ordinary. He has created a remarkable visual journey of remembering, appreciating, and reconnecting with what once was and what remains. The landscape of Forgottonia, while truly rooted in American tradition, is in transition. Farms have been abandoned, businesses no longer have a familial legacy, and traces of home can only be found in the land itself. Those who remain take pleasure in small town life, making a living off the land and the universal celebration of the cycle of life. Forgottonia reminds us to value simple pleasures, to smell the good smells, to say hello to a neighbor, and most importantly, to understand that our sense of "home" is interconnected to the earth and to the place where we are born." 107 pages with 91 photographs, Forgottonia, is printed the United States, by Edition One in Berkeley, CA. website: www.brucemorton.net email: mortonent@adams.net

  • Book cover of Young Faith
    Bruce Morton

     · 2015

    "Why do you believe in God?" Ever heard that one before? Christians are one of the groups most often ridiculed for our beliefs. Those in the world who don't know God and haven't experienced the life-changing salvation through Jesus Christ don't understand our unwavering commitment to the church. Society looks at us amid the fast-paced, coffee-guzzling, smartphone-addicted masses and says we're the crazy ones. We're questioned about our faith routinely. In Young Faith, a compilation of thoughts from more than 30 young people, Bruce Morton invites you to step into the world of the millennial Christian. These smart, Scripture-based, faith-filled responses to the question of why we believe will inspire you in your walk with God and make you want to take steps to reach those in your life who don't know Him yet.

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  • Book cover of John Gould Fletcher, a Bibliography
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  • Book cover of SOLDIERS of the North Shore (New Brunswick) Regiment, WW2
    Bruce Morton

     · 2024

    Soldiers, of the North Shore (New Brunswick) Regiment, WW2, Who They Were and the Battles They Fought, is a history of Canada's contribution to WW2, told in brief biographies of about 200 soldiers of all ranks. Author, Bruce Morton, the official historian of the regiment, previously recorded the regiment's history in his books One Hundred Years and the French equivalent Cent Ans, both recognized and promoted by the Juno Beach Centre. At all times during the war, the majority of these NS(NB)R soldiers, were men who had been born in New Brunswick or were living there before the war. About 60% were of English, Irish, or Scottish descent, 35% were French, and the balance were First Nations, Blacks, and others. Their fathers were most frequently small farmers, or fishermen who worked in the logging business in the winter. Amenities at home for many were limited to a wood stove, oil lamps, a well, and an outhouse. Most of these soldiers came from large families with 8 to 12 children, and it was common for siblings or a parent to die at an early age. Most of the men who served with the NS(NB)R left school after completing grade five to grade eight, and they had all lived through the ten years of the Great Depression (1929-39). The North Shore (New Brunswick) Regiment was part of the first wave of the landing on Juno Beach on D-Day (June 6, 1944). Soldiers describe their casualty-intensive battles in Normandy, and during the capture of the French ports along the English Channel, the brutal Battle of the Scheldt, and the Invasion of Germany.