George G. Ritchie (1923–2007)
Author of Return from Tomorrow
About the Author
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Works by George G. Ritchie
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1923-09-25
- Date of death
- 2007-10-29
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- USA
- Place of death
- Irvington, Virginia, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Virginia, USA
Members
Discussions
Inferno by Larry Niven / Return from Tomorrow by George G Ritchie....coincidence? in Science Fiction Fans (April 2013)
Reviews
The author dies during a routine surgery and goes to the other side. I read this years ago, but I still remember the harrowing scene where substance-abusing addict-spirits were crawling all over humans participating in the activities the spirits craved to mortally do -- e.g., drinking, drugging, sexing, etc. -- trying to get some sort of "energy hit" from their unknowing mortal proxies. It's a very to consider that whatever desires control you in this life will pass on with you to the other show more side. show less
This true story is an intriguing one about a young soldier's near-death experience. He describes not only his personal taste of death but how it influenced his continued life on Earth. He speaks of the positive effects his experiences have had on the lives of others as well. What amazes me are the many similarities with other near-death stories, especially the overwhelming love and peace they feel while glimpsing the afterlife. This book will surely give you much to ponder regarding life, show more death, and the purpose of our mortal existence. I highly recommend reading this man's true story. show less
I read Return From Tomorrow by Dr. George G. Ritchie with Elizabeth Sherill in a single sitting. The book is short, but fascinating. Some of Dr. Ritchie’s experiences correlate to other return-to-life accounts I’ve read, but his happened earlier (in the 1940s). As powerful as Dr. Ritchie’s visions were, my main takeaway from them all was the immense, undeniable love of Jesus Christ. Reading his testimony greatly encouraged me.
I also absorbed Dr. Ritchie’s wise words as he related his show more post-experience mistakes and the lessons learned: the necessity of loving others well and following one’s call in life. There are many books on those topics, but Dr. Ritchie’s message felt personal and resonated with me.
I absolutely loved Return From Tomorrow by Dr. George G. Ritchie with Elizabeth Sherill and recommend this inspirational book to everyone, Christian or not. Five stars.
Disclosure of Material Connection: I was provided a copy of this book by the author or publisher. All opinions in this review are my own. show less
I also absorbed Dr. Ritchie’s wise words as he related his show more post-experience mistakes and the lessons learned: the necessity of loving others well and following one’s call in life. There are many books on those topics, but Dr. Ritchie’s message felt personal and resonated with me.
I absolutely loved Return From Tomorrow by Dr. George G. Ritchie with Elizabeth Sherill and recommend this inspirational book to everyone, Christian or not. Five stars.
Disclosure of Material Connection: I was provided a copy of this book by the author or publisher. All opinions in this review are my own. show less
I'm in the middle with this one...
*This review may contain spoilers*
I picked this up because I really enjoy reading about people who have had near death experiences. I find it so interesting how different these experiences are for people, and it's not just the "light" that they see. George saw much more than that. He had a travel experience and a visit with Christ.
At first I was amazed and couldn't wait to read on, but the feel was off. Was he just having a dream? This experience went on show more for what seems like forever, yet he was only dead for 9 minutes. Not only that, the experience ends with Jesus taking him back to Earth, yet it's really the caretaker who stabs his heart with adrenaline that brings him back to life again. Then, there's the remembrance he has to a cafe he'd never been to, but went to in his travels during the NDE. I found that amazing, but was God trying to reassure him? I mean of all places, he's back at the cafe on a trip back to boot camp?
Regardless what really happened, the book sends many messages to how we should love and live well. To love and forgive is the way to go no matter what. If only it were that easy for everyone...
3*** show less
*This review may contain spoilers*
I picked this up because I really enjoy reading about people who have had near death experiences. I find it so interesting how different these experiences are for people, and it's not just the "light" that they see. George saw much more than that. He had a travel experience and a visit with Christ.
At first I was amazed and couldn't wait to read on, but the feel was off. Was he just having a dream? This experience went on show more for what seems like forever, yet he was only dead for 9 minutes. Not only that, the experience ends with Jesus taking him back to Earth, yet it's really the caretaker who stabs his heart with adrenaline that brings him back to life again. Then, there's the remembrance he has to a cafe he'd never been to, but went to in his travels during the NDE. I found that amazing, but was God trying to reassure him? I mean of all places, he's back at the cafe on a trip back to boot camp?
Regardless what really happened, the book sends many messages to how we should love and live well. To love and forgive is the way to go no matter what. If only it were that easy for everyone...
3*** show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 2
- Members
- 445
- Popularity
- #55,081
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 10
- ISBNs
- 21
- Languages
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