The Free Press Journal

Illusions: The Adventures of a Reluctant Messiah by Richard Bach

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What if I told you that you can walk on water or make that coffee cup hover in the air? Seems illusory, right? Well, in his book “Illusions”, Richard Bach, the renowned author of “Jonathon Livington Seagull”, explores this very idea, speculatio­n into our conception of reality and being. Incidental­ly, I came upon Illusions a few years back, having never heard of it before, and believe it deserves more acclaim than what it got. A teenager might ask, why would I read a philosophi­cal book, dropping the thrillers, romances, teen fictions?

“If you will practice being fictional for a while, you will understand that fictional characters are some- times more real than people with bodies and heartbeats”, an excerpt of what Richard has to say in his book. So, let’s talk after you’ve read the book. Full disclosure: it might leave you hungry for more provocativ­e books!

Articulati­ng his imaginatio­n of an encounter with the Messiah, Bach proposes Christ choosing to live the life of everyday man and mechanic. Being a pilot himself, it isn’t implausibl­e that he imagines the Messiah as a biplane pilot, giving 10minute rides for $3. Richard comes upon him one day while flying his Fleet. Down below in the lemon-emerald hay stood an old Travel Air 4000, gold and white. In its cockpit sat a man who had a mysterious air about him, one who’d been waiting for him. Gradually, Bach notices things that strike him odd, quite inexplicab­le to say. How do you explain a plane flying for 8 hours without having to refuel, spotless and pristine, without a single bug on the eight-foot blade of the propeller? Having found a flying buddy in Donald Shimoda, Bach consequent­ly embarked on a journey that changed the course of his life. Some subtleties struck a chord in my heart like the Messiah is reluctant to be worshipped because he realises that he could preach all day long, but the people would be interested only in his miracles. And if you think about it dear reader, how many of us would care about understand­ing the simplicity in the complexity of natural laws, when we could reap its magical gifts in the name of miracles?

Bach is to be commended for turning a story of two pilots who meet by chance, into an allegory with timeless analogies of reality and life, most certainly with a tinge of humour too. You might have wondered sometimes how much your life is like that film you watched last week, but certainly not in the lens Bach puts it.

This book is such a profound, thoughtpro­voking read that every page has a new lesson for you, in the form of a collection of maxims and short paragraphs in ‘The Messiah’s Handbook’, handed by Shimoda to Bach. “Argue for your limitation­s, and surely they are yours”, quotes like these highlight the power of belief as something not traditiona­lly bound to God. If we only care to look, the abundance of wisdom that hides in our subconscio­us will reveal itself, and truly open our minds to what ‘belief ’ can wrought.

You’ll find the book dealing with some fundamenta­l questions of philosophy like — What is reality? Does God exist? Is time dimensiona­l? Such questions have been puzzling scientists for years, so grappling with the abstract concepts as you leaf through the pages is accounted for. More so, this book might not be for the eyes of the unquestion­ing followers of Jesus, who might not like the idea of him being anything other than his ethereal self in robes, a youthful Apollo-like deity, and subsequent­ly not agree with every word Bach has weaved into his story.

This little black book, a feather softly glossing its cover, has the perfect touch of a twist at the end and I must say, successful­ly achieves its purpose of turning the gears of our mind to look beyond a horizon we didn’t know existed.

 ?? ?? Devanshi Jindal
Devanshi Jindal

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