Andrew collins author biography sample
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Andrew Collins
Origins of the Gods
- Qesem Cave, Skinwalkers, and Contact with Transdimensional Intelligences
- By: Andrew Collins, Gregory L. Little, Erich von Däniken - foreword
- Narrated by: Micah Hanks
- Length: 10 hrs and 15 mins
- Unabridged
The authors show how the spiritual and shamanic beliefs of more than 100 Native American tribes align with their theory, and they reveal how some of these shamanic transdimensional portals are still active, sharing vivid examples from Skinwalker Ranch in Utah and Bempton in northern England....
- 4 out of 5 stars
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- By Sandrine on 10-31-22
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I'm a freelance editor, copy editor, and writer based in Mexico City, but also living part-time in both Portland, Oregon and New Hampshire's Lake Sunapee region. Additionally, since 2004, I've taught both travel writing and food writing for New York City's rewowned Gotham Writers Workshop. My professional focus is primarily in nonfiction, although I graduated from Wesleyan University (in Middletown, CT) with a degree in literature and will consider certain fiction projects, especially if they relate to my primary areas of expertise: travel, food, and LGBTQ. In my capacity as a magazine and travel guidebook editor over the years, I've also developed a strong knowledge of and interest in art, architecture, history, biography, cinema, and hiking and the outdoors).
I've contributed as an editor, copy editor, or writer to more than 200 guidebooks for the internationally respected travel publisher Fodor's (I currently work on the Pacific Northwest, National Parks of the West, New Mexico,
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Andrew Collins was born 37 years ago in Northampton. His parents never split up, in fact they rarely exchanged a cross word. No-one abused him. Nobody died. He got on well with his brother and sister and none of his friends drowned in a canal. He has never stayed overnight in a hospital and has no emotional scars from his upbringing, except a slight lingering resentment that Anita Barker once mocked the stabilisers on his bike. Where Did It All Go Right? is a jealous memoir written by someone who occasionally wishes life had dealt him a few more juicy marketable blows. The author delves back into his first 18 years in search of something - anything - that might have left him deeply and irreparably damaged. With tales of bikes, telly, sweets, good health, domestic harmony and happy holidays, Andrew aims to bring a little hope to all those out there living with the emotional after-effects of a really nice childhood. Andrew Collins kept a diary from the age of five, so he reall