EKA: Volume III

On Our Own,
1943ý1950

by Erica Moore


Formats

Softcover
$18.95
Softcover
$18.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 8/20/2007

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 234
ISBN : 9780595452224

About the Book

EKA, On Our Own, 1943-1950

EKA the multi-volume memoir is a song, Erica's song, a spiritual, sung about her life and God; how she followed her spirituality, her feelings, the waiting, worrying, then knowing the way, heart singing, through many passages in her long, long life.

Erica Maria Johanna Grossgerge was born in the German capitol of Berlin on the first day of January, nineteen hundred and eleven: 1/1/11. Her life spans most of the twentieth century and she considers herself blessed to have met so many spiritual figures important to the world's well-being.

As a young adult Erica was continually drawn towards the English speaking world, first by the film "Showboat", then by her employment in American and English companies. In Munich she met and fell in love with the son of an American diplomat. Due to her husband's failed academic life, they moved into his retired parent's house down in the small town of Summerland, near beautiful Santa Barbara. There, Erica gave birth to her two sons, Michael and Daniel, and began her life as a mother. She moved out on her own, supporting herself and her sons with bookkeeping jobs while trying to start a printing press business.

Many paths and many years later, the book EKA was written.


About the Author

Born in early 20th century Germany, Erica Maria Moore has led a long, rich, fascinating life. She has been engaged in spiritual activities since the 1930s, supporting two sons in America as a single mother in the 1940s and 50s, made lasting connections with all sorts of influential artists, meditation masters, and healers, and has traveled extensively all over the world. Erica has completed five novellas, two dozen short stories, many poems, and over 1,600 pages of her life story. Up until her passing at age 96, she lived Santa Barbara, California, where she visited with friends and family, meditated and read daily, and worked to get her writings published.