1 result for (book:ur2 AND session:726 AND stemmed:volum)
[... 35 paragraphs ...]
(11:04. “I knew we weren’t going to get a break until we finished that goddamn analogy,” Jane laughed after she’d come out of a good trance. “I do think we’re going to lose readers along the way, though — this book’s getting too hard to follow. I also think it’s going to be in two volumes. I haven’t had the guts to see how much material we’ve gotten so far.”
(Nor have I checked up on “Unknown” Reality’s bulk. This was the second time in three weeks that Jane had mentioned a two-volume work; see the opening notes for the 721st session. I wondered aloud whether she might be getting herself used to such an idea. I added that I didn’t think she need worry about readers following Seth’s material — that certainly many others are just as curious as we are about where “Unknown” Reality is going.
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
(3. The material on my parents reaches back to the first two sessions, 679–80, in [added later] Volume 1 of “Unknown” Reality.
[... 24 paragraphs ...]
4. Earlier in this decade of our camouflage reality, all four of our parents died within a period of less than three years. In Volume 1 of “Unknown” Reality, see Note 2 for Session 680, and the notes at the beginning of the 696th session.
5. In Volume 1 Seth described the role a nonphysical Stella Butts played in Jane’s and my house-hunting activities in Sayre, Pennsylvania, last April: See the 693rd session, with notes.
6. From her viewpoint my mother was, indeed, quite baffled when I turned away from a well-paying career in commercial art toward a very risky one in “fine art,” or painting. The year was 1953, and I’d just met Jane. My mother was 61 years old, I was 34, and Jane was 24. See the few additional details in Note 10 for the 679th session, in Volume 1.
[... 2 paragraphs ...]
8. Related material about my parents that has been published can be found in Volume 1. See Note 9 for the 679th session, and notes 2 and 3 for the 680th session.