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Out of My Mind: The Discovery of Saunders-Vixen
 
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Out of My Mind: The Discovery of Saunders-Vixen (Hardcover)

by Richard Bach (Author)
2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (44 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Amazon.com

Richard Bach, the writer who flew to success on the wings of Jonathan Livingston Seagull, once again returns to flight for metaphysical inspiration. Bach begins this journey with a quandary--how to customize his airplane, a small Piper Cub? For example, how can he keep his latch door from slamming shut in midflight? How to stop his oil cap from jiggling loose and disappearing? With each question the solutions appear; they are apparently delivered by a vision of a benevolent woman. Before long, Bach realizes that an aircraft designer from an earlier time and another dimension is tutoring him. Of course, Bach takes the ultimate flight into her parallel universe where he finds an old-fashioned aviation company that solves problems for troubled aviators. He also meets his mysterious muse Laura Bristol.

This is a brief story (101 pages) that wrestles with the limitations of present-day technology and the grandeur of the early days of aviation. True to Bach's mission, it also wrestles with the choices we make in this time and this moment, and how they can change our life and our universe. --Gail Hudson



From Publishers Weekly

Fans of the author or of small planes might enjoy this slight parable by Bach, still best known for Jonathan Livingston Seagull, but others will find it a flat experience. In a tale that could easily be retitled "Zen and the Art of Piper Cub Maintenance," narrator Richard Bach is having problems with the door latch of his plane. As he searches for a solution, designs begins to come to him from nowhere until one day, through one of the designs, he glimpses the image of his "love messenger." Believing that "everything is exactly as it is for a reason," Richard devotes long passages to pondering the whys behind seeming minutiaeAsuch as why his lovely messenger tucks a pencil in her hair, concluding finallyAfollowing quite a leap of logicAthat she must come from another, computerless, time. Richard's obsession with the lovely messenger and her designs eventually leads him to the discovery of a parallel universeAEngland's Saunders-Vixen Aircraft Company Ltd., circa 1923Aan aviation Shangri-La, where the answers to questions lead to more questions. Simplistic to the point of parody, with questions sometimes broken down into jerky individual elements ("Are you telling me that Geoffrey de Havilland? Copied? The design? Of your airplane? And called it his?"), this New Age parable is almost ludicrous in its strain for profundity. Line drawings. (Sept.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

44 Reviews
5 star:
 (11)
4 star:
 (7)
3 star:
 (6)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (17)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
2.8 out of 5 stars (44 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars Do not overlook power in simplicity., Mar 26 2004
By "sonomaybe" (Asheville, NC United States) - See all my reviews
As the character Laura Bristol says of why she suggested leather, rather than steel cable, "...It seemed the simplest solution to your problem, and likely the most practical."

I found this, my first introduction to Richard Bach's work, both a pleasant surprise and I suspect, something that will stay with me for a long time. Absolutely beautiful imagery! Not quite as plain, perhaps, as Hemingway, or as gut-wrenching, but it contains the same seed of powerful storytelling - not a word wasted. It was not surprising to see reviews both angry and defensive. Good writing pushes buttons. His work has obviously inspired and pricked.

I understand the inspiration - whether you've found a soulmate, or in search of one - this hints not of the sadness of loss, but at the joy of meeting and experiencing. I found that unbelievably wise in this day and time of trying to catagorize, label, psychoanalyze and define love in our desperate attempt to catch and possess it. And the writing, simple as it is, evokes the pure emotions of attraction, curiosity, frustration and quiet acceptance with no more fanfare than the scent of fresh-mown grass or a geranium makes when you happen across it on a summer's day.

I am not so sure I understand why the "pricking". It is a small book. Perhaps we measure value in volume? Perhaps we want tidy endings - we want a story, and a story that validates our own experiences rather than offering a different perspective? Perhaps it tugs too strongly at our own regretted and unfinished endings? I personally felt none - but then I have found my soulmate, and I live with the constant in-and-out of a relationship that is measured in the moment, only. To measure it by the future and past would be to destroy it. No tidy story. No assured future. Just the joy (and sometimes hurts) of now.

Personally I think this book captures the brief moment of experience, the quickest flash of eternity, more beautifully than I could imagine described. I recommend it on a rainy, reflective day when your soul needs a little quiet.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Richard Bach has finally learned to fly, May 14 2003
By A Customer
The Icarus who wrote One (I'm so glad I never read Bridge) came crashing and burning to the sea and has redeemed himself with this little gem. The notion of Soulmates DESTINED to be together should be called "how to find your Cellmate"! How can something that you did not choose be so wonderful? What if it changes or something goes wrong? I think that is what this book is all about. Leslie Parrish IS in this book, couldn't it be that she (or their relationship) represent the door latch ("the problem was the door") or the oil cap (a free flying canary?) of this otherwise perfect flying machine? No one is perfect, but some people just aren't compatible. Why should you be forced to remain with something you are not happy with? Simply because you believe he/she is YOUR SOULMATE??? Even the Catholic church allows annullments!!! Anyway, the last line says it all, "I'm glad I have a choice." I am too and I am glad that Richard Bach is not flying so close to the Sun anymore.
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5.0 out of 5 stars what do you mean Leslie's not in the book?, May 14 2003
By gabriela (austin, texas) - See all my reviews
who do you think the door latch and the oil cap represent??? after all the boos and hisses, i had to give 5 stars to what is by far Richard Bachs greatest work... Bach sold us his Soulmate wings and we flew with them, but like carus, who came crashing down when he flew too close to the Sun, Bach realized having a Soulmate is like having a Cellmate--you don't have a choice--you're stuck with that person!!! No annullment, no divorce, because you are *soulmates* forced by *destiny* to be together come hell or highwater! Bach learned the hard way, not having a choice about who you "choose" for a soulmate is a recipe for disaster. The last line of the book is redeeming, (hence the 5 stars) he writes, "I am glad I have a choice".
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Most recent customer reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Not as bad as everybody thinks
Well, I ordered this book before I read all the reviews here, and I kicked myself after reading them. Read more
Published on Jul 18 2002 by Martin J. Filiatrault

4.0 out of 5 stars Short & Sweet, and it's still Richard Bach
I'm very glad I read some of the reviews here on Amazon before I began reading this book; I hadn't known of Richard & Leslie's divorce, and I would have cast about for her in the... Read more
Published on Mar 11 2002 by Erin K. Darling

1.0 out of 5 stars Where is the rest of the book??
I have been a fan of Mr. Bachs for over 25 years. I gave his books as gifts to every one I knew, but this book "Out of My Mind" was such a disappointment. Read more
Published on Feb 10 2002 by yarrow34

4.0 out of 5 stars Pure Magic, but far too short.
It took me an hour to read Richard Bach's book. Reading it was like, I remember, listening to Elvis in the Madison Square Garden in 1973: I would have stayed and listened to the... Read more
Published on Feb 7 2002

1.0 out of 5 stars Poor Richard
As I was dozing off lightly while reading this book, I thought I sensed a fleeting glimpse of Richard Bach's editor. Read more
Published on Dec 14 2001 by bastrom

2.0 out of 5 stars A short story which nobody needed
First of all, I've read all but the early flying books from Richard Bach and enjoyed most of them (my favourites are Seagull, Illusions and Bridge). Read more
Published on Dec 2 2001 by Markus Schmidt

2.0 out of 5 stars Out of his inspiration?
Richard Bach is the most inspiring writer alive. Or he just was the most inspiring one? The alternative explanation to much of the disappointment that seems to be common to Bach... Read more
Published on Aug 4 2001 by zivcevic

1.0 out of 5 stars Drivel
I've been reading customer reviews. Some look for wisdom and insight, though clearly there is none in this book. Read more
Published on Sep 25 2000 by Jenelle

2.0 out of 5 stars OK, I give, what's with this Richard????
I looked forward to reading "Out of My Mind".....I look forward to reading anything by Richard Bach and I have most of his other books, but when I sat down to read... Read more
Published on Sep 19 2000 by Carol A. Wojahn

4.0 out of 5 stars Instruction manual for escaping time/space
Richard Bach has always been more of a teacher than a storyteller. His plots tend to be coathangar-thin, but thick in wisdom. In his latest endeavor this remains true. Read more
Published on Aug 20 2000 by Zoeeagleeye

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