
Description:
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Through the pages of the book, you will meet many people and enjoy a narrative of healing, hope, and transcendent connection with nature.This is a magical journey, told very descriptively and with great reverence and love. It is a story about repairing the web of life - on this side and the other. The best news is that we can practice these ancient teachings in our own backyards or with the herb gardens on our kitchen window sills. Cowan tells us how to do that.” ―Anna Jedrziewski and InannaWorks.com
“Cowan has charted the territory for a medicine of the past and the future and restores one of the vital links for this to happen―which is the healing power behind our relationship with the plant world. This book is an excellent addition to the alternative medicine collections.” ―Malidoma Somé, author of Ritual: Power, Healing and Community and Of Water and the Spirit: Ritual, Magic and Initiation in the Life of an African Shaman
“Eliot Cowan’s inspiring Plant Spirit Medicine explores the intrinsic unity and connectedness of all living things. It extends the boundaries of consciousness to include not just humans and animals but plants as well. Important not only because of its profound implications for healing, this book is a blueprint for our survival. It illuminates the kind of sacred regard we must develop for all of life on Earth if our species is to survive and thrive.” ―Larry Dossey, MD, author of One Mind: How Our Individual Mind Is Part of a Greater Consciousness and Why It Matters
About the Author
Review:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Future of Healing
Book Review – Plant Spirit Medicine: A Journey into the Healing Wisdom of Plants by Eliot Cowan, Boulder, CO: Sounds True, 2014.Plant Spirit Medicine was recommended to me by an herbalist friend, Jennifer Tucker. With my years of practice and teaching hypnosis and ecstatic trance I have been guided by many spirits, ancestral spirits including the spirits of animals, birds, reptiles, and insects. Several years ago, I realized that what was missing from my journeys into the world of the spirits were the spirits of the Earth’s flora. Thus, I began sitting with plants, asking them to become my spirit guides. This direction diverged from the work of many of my herbalist friends, because, like with my animal spirit guides, the plants do not need to be ingested to learn and benefit from them. As with my animal spirit guides the plants were very ready to open themselves to me. I still have so much to learn, and Eliot Cowan’s exceptional book has opened many new doors to me. For him the spirit of the plant is most central in his work as a healer.In Plant Spirit Medicine Cowan does not address the medicinal powers of specific plants but offers many fascinating stories of calling upon the spirits of the plants and how these spirits bring about the healing of those who come to him. While listening to the plant spirits in an altered-state of dreaming and waking visions, the plants are very ready to offer him direction.Cowan was raised in the conventional American way of life, but upon graduating from college he realized he knew nothing about the earth. Feeling an urgency to learn he left for a farm in Vermont where he began to take an interest in sustainability and herbal medicine, an interest that led to his interest in the spirits and the restoration of the ancient ways of healing. In this pursuit he has learned from a number of indigenous healers. He evetually became an apprentice to don Guadalupe Gonzalez Rios, a Huichol shaman of Mexico who eventually performed a ritual to make Cowan a guide to other shamanic apprentices in the Huichol tradition.Though it is most appropriate to identify the indigenous healers by their tribe, e.g. the Huichol, I am attracted to using the broader term of indigenous when appropriate because of the word “dig” imbedded in it, digging in the Earth for our sustainability. The high and unsustainable expense of our high-tech medicine is leading us to return to the effective ways of the traditional and indigenous healers, elders who rely upon the plants, animals, rocks, water, fire, wind and the entire natural world who know and love us as grandchildren.Cowan tells many powerful and fascinating stories of listening to dreams and other visioning experiences of plants and their spirits, experiences that bring us into a new yet ancient world of healing, of healing the imbalances of life, the causes of illness. Our dualistic lives are centered on that which is us and ours vs. that which is not us and not ours. This dualism isolates us from the interdependency of all that is of the Earth, a separation that brings us to violence and is leading our demise. Though this book was published in 2014, well before the election of Donald Trump, this separation and violence are now so vividly evident. Cowan hangs on to the belief that at least some humans will survive into the new age of sustainability, health, balance, and living in oneness with all that is of the Earth, but there are many who do not hold this vision and will not survive. Cowan beautifully shows us the path for this survival, a path of again listening to, learning from, and valuing the spirits of the Earth’s flora.Over the last few years I have read about the Chinese five elements: fire, earth, metal, wood, and water, or more commonly the four elements of fire, earth, air and water as they relate to herbal medicine. I have not resonated with this model but now find that Cowan’s spiritual descriptions of these five elements make much sense. The heat of fire, heat coming from the sun, sitting around campfires, and from other sources brings vitality and passion to life. Humanity lives by the fire in many ways, in cooking, eating, laughter, care for children, as well as in listening to the elders. Plants capture heat and light from the sun. Fire controls the activities of body, mind and spirit, producing joy, happiness, pleasure, laughter, relationships and sexuality. The lack of fire brings illness to the heart and mind.Earth provides nourishment, security, identity, mother’s breasts, and intimacy to relationships. Mothers need strength, and we all need Mother Earth’s nourishment to overcome the stresses of life. The spleen and pancreas provide the transportation of nourishment from the stomach to the cells, bringing sugar to the cells to give us energy and keep us healthy. Earth brings us the nurturing plants upon which we depend.Metal shows us what is valuable in life. Cowan’s mentor, don Guadalupe, acknowledged that everything of value came from his father. He showed his son the way through the world, the ways of cumulating spiritual wealth, of not hording possessions.The mysteries of water harbored in the spirit of the kidney are pooled by the bladder spirit. All the juices of life, e.g. adrenaline we call upon in danger, and the digestive fluids for food that we eat, are of the element of water. The streams and rivers, the flowing blood of Mother Earth, bring us life.Wood seen in the growing tree needs room, sunlight, water, minerals and soil nutrients, the same as our needs as humans. But our current economic system is destroying the forests as well as our lives. Besides the illnesses caused by the imbalances in these five elements Cowan addresses two other imbalances, the imbalance of being possessed by some unhealthy spirit and the imbalance of our male and female aspects, an imbalance that affects the relationship between husband and wife.Though this book does not focus on the use of specific medicinal herbs, Cowan provides a chapter describing several herbs that he finds useful in bring balance to these imbalances: the warmth of scarlet pimpernel for imbalances of fire, and the soft and nurturing nature of mullein for imbalances of the earth. As a purifier of the soul, Plantain aids in treating imbalances of metal. To treat problems related to the element of water, Cowan uses the stream orchid, Epipactis gigantea, native to western North America. For wood Cowan uses the flexible willow to treat rigidity and uptightness.Besides these five plants Cowan finds several other herbs indispensable in addressing other issues beyond those of the five elements: mugwort for opening the acupuncture meridians; anemone for a person who is preoccupied by worldly problems; St. Johnwort for binding together wounds including the wound of depression; and the Southwest desert plant filaree as a spiritual messenger when seeking answers to questions.The final four chapters are of what Cowan has learned from four of his mentors, don Enrique Salmon and don Lucio Campos of Mexico, Siri Gian Singh Khalsa from West Africa, and Grandma Bertha Grove from the Southern Ute Reservation. With each teacher Cowan’s questions pursue his interest in their uses of the spirits of plants as opposed to the prescriptive uses of the plants as used by most contemporary herbalists and high-tech medicine. These valuable interviews were very enlightening. In conclusion Cowan again tells us of the importance of ritual for treating each person individually over and above using the medicinal herbs in a prescriptive manner. He teaches his ways at his Blue Deer Center in Margaretville, NY, only 48 miles from where I live in Ulster County, New York.In my practice and teaching of ecstatic trance I rely on the shamanic body postures as researched by Felicitas Goodman, postures that give direction to the trance experience, offering a viable alternative to Cowan’s eye-opening ways of journeying with the spirits of plants. I have previously written about these ecstatic postures and find four of the ecstatic postures exceptionally useful in medicinal plant journeying. I am eager to find my way to Cowan’s Blue Deer Center once the social distancing of the COVID virus has subsided to expand my ways of journeying with the spirits.
5.0 out of 5 stars Great gift for your witchy friends.
My wife is really into natural healing, all that stuff. Made great brownie points when I gave it to her. I could ask for nothing more.
5.0 out of 5 stars Mesmerizing
For those with open hearts and minds, who feel the pull to connect to their roots and to the roots of the earth. A beautiful book full of necessary truths and ideas. If we are going to get this planet back on track, the themes here will lead us there.The chapters about plants like marijuana and ayahuasca are full of information that will be important maps to the influx of people looking to do spiritual experimentation with them. Eliot writes about good intentions often not being quite enough to honor these sacred plants. This book helped me further connect with plants in a way that is beyond the physical nature of all things living on the Earth. Plants and animals and rivers and humans all have a spirit that houses their true essence and the connections are available to us if we are willing to discover truths beyond our Western conditioning..
5.0 out of 5 stars Marci is Delight to work with
Marci is a delight!! She is very extremely helpful. My used book was in Excellent condition!! Plus, I was very impressed with the packaging!! It came sealed in plastic to protect the book. I would definitely purchase from Russell-Dove!!
5.0 out of 5 stars I'm not done reading this yet, but boy is it good! It has positively transformed my life already!
I simply understand how to live better, thanks to this book.
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing Experiences with Nature
This is a great book--one of many coming out now to teach all of us the true nature of reality--everything is connected, everything is alive. Spirit energy is real. I appreciate the author so much for going on these exploratory journeys into a part of reality that most know nothing about and bringing back so much value. I love the practices he recommends for just spending time contemplating in nature, speaking with the plants, waters and other beings to learn their truths. I particularly loved the insight that the plants want to help us, because we certainly need help!
5.0 out of 5 stars A MUST READ!
I love this book. Eliot is profoundly wise and his expression of the plant path is so inspiring and full of beauty and intentionality. This is one of my course books for an herbalism program and I feel truly changed by his insights, observations and love for plant people, ancestral knowledge and the beauty and complexity of spiritually connecting to all earthly things.
3.0 out of 5 stars Meh..
I’m halfway through this book. I found some of his earlier personal stories interesting but the book started to unravel for me when the author started preaching about things like the ills of modern society. Not only did I feel like I was being lectured on things I’m already well aware of, I didn’t really feel like his personal stories added any depth. Interesting, sure, but I thought I was going to learn about plant spirit medicine. Plus I don’t need another white dude to mansplain to me about women’s bodies.
A Green meditation.
Eliot Cowan has a gentle voice which is very calming and reading his book gives a sense of comfort. He encourages a far better relationship with the plant kingdom and the environment that we are a part of.
Great book
Very interesting book it opens you up to another view of the ecological world and our place in it.
inspirador!
Minha gratidão ao autor por compartilhar suas experiências que me permitiram uma reconexão com a natureza, um relembrar da nossa interação espiritual com as plantas.
Book review? Or seller review. I don't know
Cisscentric and heteronormativeI felt annoyed reading this book.Couldn't finishAs for the transaction and delivery great.I give five stars for that. but the book no stars
Butuncul sifa
Bu kitap, gunumuzde populer olan "su hastaliga su bitki iyi gelir" yaklasiminin otesinde; "gercek sifa nedir ve bitki 'spirit'leri iyilesmemize nasil araci olabilirler" gibi konulari bolca hikaye esliginde anlatiyor. Bu nedenle bitki isimleri cok az geciyor, sonucta yazarin deneyimlerine gore sifaya araci olan bitkinin fiziksel hali degil O'nun ruhu. Ve tabii ki iyilesmek de yine bizim elimizde. Modern insanin buyukleriyle olan sozlu kulturel aktariminin cogunlukla devlet politikalari ve kapitalizm esliginde paramparca edildigi bu karanlik zamanlarda Eliot'in yazdiklari yolumuzu bulabilmemiz icin bize isik oluyor.
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Plant Spirit Medicine
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Visit the Sounds True Adult Store
Plant Spirit Medicine
BHD1202
Quantity:
Order today to get by
Free delivery on orders over BHD 20
Imported From: United States
At bolo.bh, we stand behind the authenticity and quality of every product we sell. We guarantee that all items offered on our website are 100% genuine, sourced directly from authorized distributors, trusted partners, or the original brands themselves.
We do not sell counterfeit, replica, or unauthorized goods. Each product undergoes thorough inspection and verification at our consolidation and fulfilment centers to ensure it meets our strict authenticity and quality standards before being shipped and delivered to you.
If you ever have concerns regarding the authenticity of a product purchased from us, please contact Bolo Support . We will review your inquiry promptly and, if necessary, provide documentation verifying authenticity or offer a suitable resolution.
Your trust is our top priority, and we are committed to maintaining transparency and integrity in every transaction.
All product information, including images, descriptions, and reviews, is provided by third-party vendors. bolo.bh is not responsible for any claims, promotions, or representations made within product content or images. For more accurate or detailed product information, please contact the manufacturer directly or reach out to Bolo Support.
Unless otherwise stated during checkout, all prices displayed on the product page include applicable taxes and import duties.
bolo.bh operates in accordance with the laws and regulations of Bahrain. Any items found to be restricted or prohibited for sale within the UAE will be cancelled prior to shipment. We take proactive measures to ensure that only products permitted for sale in Bahrain are listed on our website.
All items are shipped by air, and any products classified as “Dangerous Goods (DG)” under IATA regulations will be removed from the order and cancelled.
All orders are processed manually, and we make every effort to process them promptly once confirmed. Products cancelled due to the above reasons will be permanently removed from listings across the website.
Description:
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Through the pages of the book, you will meet many people and enjoy a narrative of healing, hope, and transcendent connection with nature.This is a magical journey, told very descriptively and with great reverence and love. It is a story about repairing the web of life - on this side and the other. The best news is that we can practice these ancient teachings in our own backyards or with the herb gardens on our kitchen window sills. Cowan tells us how to do that.” ―Anna Jedrziewski and InannaWorks.com
“Cowan has charted the territory for a medicine of the past and the future and restores one of the vital links for this to happen―which is the healing power behind our relationship with the plant world. This book is an excellent addition to the alternative medicine collections.” ―Malidoma Somé, author of Ritual: Power, Healing and Community and Of Water and the Spirit: Ritual, Magic and Initiation in the Life of an African Shaman
“Eliot Cowan’s inspiring Plant Spirit Medicine explores the intrinsic unity and connectedness of all living things. It extends the boundaries of consciousness to include not just humans and animals but plants as well. Important not only because of its profound implications for healing, this book is a blueprint for our survival. It illuminates the kind of sacred regard we must develop for all of life on Earth if our species is to survive and thrive.” ―Larry Dossey, MD, author of One Mind: How Our Individual Mind Is Part of a Greater Consciousness and Why It Matters
About the Author
Review:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Future of Healing
Book Review – Plant Spirit Medicine: A Journey into the Healing Wisdom of Plants by Eliot Cowan, Boulder, CO: Sounds True, 2014.Plant Spirit Medicine was recommended to me by an herbalist friend, Jennifer Tucker. With my years of practice and teaching hypnosis and ecstatic trance I have been guided by many spirits, ancestral spirits including the spirits of animals, birds, reptiles, and insects. Several years ago, I realized that what was missing from my journeys into the world of the spirits were the spirits of the Earth’s flora. Thus, I began sitting with plants, asking them to become my spirit guides. This direction diverged from the work of many of my herbalist friends, because, like with my animal spirit guides, the plants do not need to be ingested to learn and benefit from them. As with my animal spirit guides the plants were very ready to open themselves to me. I still have so much to learn, and Eliot Cowan’s exceptional book has opened many new doors to me. For him the spirit of the plant is most central in his work as a healer.In Plant Spirit Medicine Cowan does not address the medicinal powers of specific plants but offers many fascinating stories of calling upon the spirits of the plants and how these spirits bring about the healing of those who come to him. While listening to the plant spirits in an altered-state of dreaming and waking visions, the plants are very ready to offer him direction.Cowan was raised in the conventional American way of life, but upon graduating from college he realized he knew nothing about the earth. Feeling an urgency to learn he left for a farm in Vermont where he began to take an interest in sustainability and herbal medicine, an interest that led to his interest in the spirits and the restoration of the ancient ways of healing. In this pursuit he has learned from a number of indigenous healers. He evetually became an apprentice to don Guadalupe Gonzalez Rios, a Huichol shaman of Mexico who eventually performed a ritual to make Cowan a guide to other shamanic apprentices in the Huichol tradition.Though it is most appropriate to identify the indigenous healers by their tribe, e.g. the Huichol, I am attracted to using the broader term of indigenous when appropriate because of the word “dig” imbedded in it, digging in the Earth for our sustainability. The high and unsustainable expense of our high-tech medicine is leading us to return to the effective ways of the traditional and indigenous healers, elders who rely upon the plants, animals, rocks, water, fire, wind and the entire natural world who know and love us as grandchildren.Cowan tells many powerful and fascinating stories of listening to dreams and other visioning experiences of plants and their spirits, experiences that bring us into a new yet ancient world of healing, of healing the imbalances of life, the causes of illness. Our dualistic lives are centered on that which is us and ours vs. that which is not us and not ours. This dualism isolates us from the interdependency of all that is of the Earth, a separation that brings us to violence and is leading our demise. Though this book was published in 2014, well before the election of Donald Trump, this separation and violence are now so vividly evident. Cowan hangs on to the belief that at least some humans will survive into the new age of sustainability, health, balance, and living in oneness with all that is of the Earth, but there are many who do not hold this vision and will not survive. Cowan beautifully shows us the path for this survival, a path of again listening to, learning from, and valuing the spirits of the Earth’s flora.Over the last few years I have read about the Chinese five elements: fire, earth, metal, wood, and water, or more commonly the four elements of fire, earth, air and water as they relate to herbal medicine. I have not resonated with this model but now find that Cowan’s spiritual descriptions of these five elements make much sense. The heat of fire, heat coming from the sun, sitting around campfires, and from other sources brings vitality and passion to life. Humanity lives by the fire in many ways, in cooking, eating, laughter, care for children, as well as in listening to the elders. Plants capture heat and light from the sun. Fire controls the activities of body, mind and spirit, producing joy, happiness, pleasure, laughter, relationships and sexuality. The lack of fire brings illness to the heart and mind.Earth provides nourishment, security, identity, mother’s breasts, and intimacy to relationships. Mothers need strength, and we all need Mother Earth’s nourishment to overcome the stresses of life. The spleen and pancreas provide the transportation of nourishment from the stomach to the cells, bringing sugar to the cells to give us energy and keep us healthy. Earth brings us the nurturing plants upon which we depend.Metal shows us what is valuable in life. Cowan’s mentor, don Guadalupe, acknowledged that everything of value came from his father. He showed his son the way through the world, the ways of cumulating spiritual wealth, of not hording possessions.The mysteries of water harbored in the spirit of the kidney are pooled by the bladder spirit. All the juices of life, e.g. adrenaline we call upon in danger, and the digestive fluids for food that we eat, are of the element of water. The streams and rivers, the flowing blood of Mother Earth, bring us life.Wood seen in the growing tree needs room, sunlight, water, minerals and soil nutrients, the same as our needs as humans. But our current economic system is destroying the forests as well as our lives. Besides the illnesses caused by the imbalances in these five elements Cowan addresses two other imbalances, the imbalance of being possessed by some unhealthy spirit and the imbalance of our male and female aspects, an imbalance that affects the relationship between husband and wife.Though this book does not focus on the use of specific medicinal herbs, Cowan provides a chapter describing several herbs that he finds useful in bring balance to these imbalances: the warmth of scarlet pimpernel for imbalances of fire, and the soft and nurturing nature of mullein for imbalances of the earth. As a purifier of the soul, Plantain aids in treating imbalances of metal. To treat problems related to the element of water, Cowan uses the stream orchid, Epipactis gigantea, native to western North America. For wood Cowan uses the flexible willow to treat rigidity and uptightness.Besides these five plants Cowan finds several other herbs indispensable in addressing other issues beyond those of the five elements: mugwort for opening the acupuncture meridians; anemone for a person who is preoccupied by worldly problems; St. Johnwort for binding together wounds including the wound of depression; and the Southwest desert plant filaree as a spiritual messenger when seeking answers to questions.The final four chapters are of what Cowan has learned from four of his mentors, don Enrique Salmon and don Lucio Campos of Mexico, Siri Gian Singh Khalsa from West Africa, and Grandma Bertha Grove from the Southern Ute Reservation. With each teacher Cowan’s questions pursue his interest in their uses of the spirits of plants as opposed to the prescriptive uses of the plants as used by most contemporary herbalists and high-tech medicine. These valuable interviews were very enlightening. In conclusion Cowan again tells us of the importance of ritual for treating each person individually over and above using the medicinal herbs in a prescriptive manner. He teaches his ways at his Blue Deer Center in Margaretville, NY, only 48 miles from where I live in Ulster County, New York.In my practice and teaching of ecstatic trance I rely on the shamanic body postures as researched by Felicitas Goodman, postures that give direction to the trance experience, offering a viable alternative to Cowan’s eye-opening ways of journeying with the spirits of plants. I have previously written about these ecstatic postures and find four of the ecstatic postures exceptionally useful in medicinal plant journeying. I am eager to find my way to Cowan’s Blue Deer Center once the social distancing of the COVID virus has subsided to expand my ways of journeying with the spirits.
5.0 out of 5 stars Great gift for your witchy friends.
My wife is really into natural healing, all that stuff. Made great brownie points when I gave it to her. I could ask for nothing more.
5.0 out of 5 stars Mesmerizing
For those with open hearts and minds, who feel the pull to connect to their roots and to the roots of the earth. A beautiful book full of necessary truths and ideas. If we are going to get this planet back on track, the themes here will lead us there.The chapters about plants like marijuana and ayahuasca are full of information that will be important maps to the influx of people looking to do spiritual experimentation with them. Eliot writes about good intentions often not being quite enough to honor these sacred plants. This book helped me further connect with plants in a way that is beyond the physical nature of all things living on the Earth. Plants and animals and rivers and humans all have a spirit that houses their true essence and the connections are available to us if we are willing to discover truths beyond our Western conditioning..
5.0 out of 5 stars Marci is Delight to work with
Marci is a delight!! She is very extremely helpful. My used book was in Excellent condition!! Plus, I was very impressed with the packaging!! It came sealed in plastic to protect the book. I would definitely purchase from Russell-Dove!!
5.0 out of 5 stars I'm not done reading this yet, but boy is it good! It has positively transformed my life already!
I simply understand how to live better, thanks to this book.
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing Experiences with Nature
This is a great book--one of many coming out now to teach all of us the true nature of reality--everything is connected, everything is alive. Spirit energy is real. I appreciate the author so much for going on these exploratory journeys into a part of reality that most know nothing about and bringing back so much value. I love the practices he recommends for just spending time contemplating in nature, speaking with the plants, waters and other beings to learn their truths. I particularly loved the insight that the plants want to help us, because we certainly need help!
5.0 out of 5 stars A MUST READ!
I love this book. Eliot is profoundly wise and his expression of the plant path is so inspiring and full of beauty and intentionality. This is one of my course books for an herbalism program and I feel truly changed by his insights, observations and love for plant people, ancestral knowledge and the beauty and complexity of spiritually connecting to all earthly things.
3.0 out of 5 stars Meh..
I’m halfway through this book. I found some of his earlier personal stories interesting but the book started to unravel for me when the author started preaching about things like the ills of modern society. Not only did I feel like I was being lectured on things I’m already well aware of, I didn’t really feel like his personal stories added any depth. Interesting, sure, but I thought I was going to learn about plant spirit medicine. Plus I don’t need another white dude to mansplain to me about women’s bodies.
A Green meditation.
Eliot Cowan has a gentle voice which is very calming and reading his book gives a sense of comfort. He encourages a far better relationship with the plant kingdom and the environment that we are a part of.
Great book
Very interesting book it opens you up to another view of the ecological world and our place in it.
inspirador!
Minha gratidão ao autor por compartilhar suas experiências que me permitiram uma reconexão com a natureza, um relembrar da nossa interação espiritual com as plantas.
Book review? Or seller review. I don't know
Cisscentric and heteronormativeI felt annoyed reading this book.Couldn't finishAs for the transaction and delivery great.I give five stars for that. but the book no stars
Butuncul sifa
Bu kitap, gunumuzde populer olan "su hastaliga su bitki iyi gelir" yaklasiminin otesinde; "gercek sifa nedir ve bitki 'spirit'leri iyilesmemize nasil araci olabilirler" gibi konulari bolca hikaye esliginde anlatiyor. Bu nedenle bitki isimleri cok az geciyor, sonucta yazarin deneyimlerine gore sifaya araci olan bitkinin fiziksel hali degil O'nun ruhu. Ve tabii ki iyilesmek de yine bizim elimizde. Modern insanin buyukleriyle olan sozlu kulturel aktariminin cogunlukla devlet politikalari ve kapitalizm esliginde paramparca edildigi bu karanlik zamanlarda Eliot'in yazdiklari yolumuzu bulabilmemiz icin bize isik oluyor.
Similar suggestions by Bolo
More from this brand
Similar items from “Native American”
Share with
Or share with link
https://www.bolo.bh/products/U1622030958