Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
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(00:23):
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Speaker 2 (00:35):
All hit Welcome to the X Zone, a place where
fact is fiction and fiction is reality.
Speaker 3 (00:52):
Now here's your host, Rob McConnell.
Speaker 4 (00:57):
And welcome to the Xone everyone. My name is Rob O'Connell,
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Speaker 3 (01:59):
You know, x O Nation.
Speaker 4 (02:00):
This next hour is going to remind you a lot
of that Wonderful Life Christmas movie that we all have
loved over the years. But I'm getting ahead of myself here.
My guess this hour is a gentleman by the name
of Maury Richfield. He's the author of Mister Brees, and
it's a novel and for the forty one of his
(02:22):
fifty five years, our guests this hour, Mary Richfield had
dreamed of writing and publishing books. He finally fulfilled his
ambitions with the publication of Mister Brees, a provocative and
fast paced novel that is both a gripping page turner
and a philosophical exploration of man's origins and existence. Now,
(02:43):
this is a quote from our guests this hour. Mister
Brees is a book about hope.
Speaker 3 (02:47):
It asks what.
Speaker 4 (02:48):
If everything we've been taught turned out.
Speaker 3 (02:50):
To be a lie? What would we do?
Speaker 4 (02:53):
How would we all be judged if our maker was
suddenly to appear. It asked us all to look inside
ourselves and to ask those questions. Well, joining me this
hour is the author of Mister Brees. His name is
Maury Richfield. The website www dot mister breesth novel dot
com and joining me from this beautiful state of Pennsylvania
(03:15):
is Maury Richfield.
Speaker 3 (03:17):
And Maury welcome to the X Zone.
Speaker 5 (03:19):
Thank you, Ron, thank you very much for having me.
Speaker 4 (03:21):
You know, it's it's a great pleasure when Charlie first
sent me the information about your book, this is this
is the kind of interview that I love doing because
it brings hope. And as I said earlier, the parallel
I drew between It's a Wonderful Life and your book
this is what the world needs today. And what was
(03:43):
your inspiration for writing mister Brees.
Speaker 5 (03:46):
Well, I was going through a particularly bad time in
my own life, a fairly painful and long divorce, and
I looked around the world and believed me there was
not a lot of good things going on. I was
seeing terrible things happening on the news and reading about them,
and I just decided one day that, you know, maybe
(04:06):
if I could write something that gave people a little
bit of hope, maybe it would give me some hope,
and maybe it would also help a bunch of other people.
So I just sat down one day and started to
type and just said what if. And that's how I
started it, with just the words what if.
Speaker 4 (04:24):
Every author comes to a point when writing a book
that's that's a stumbling block. This is where usually the
author's mind goes blank. Did that happen to you? And
if so, what was the chapter?
Speaker 5 (04:37):
Well, here's the weird thing. I consider myself a storyteller
rather than an author. I have almost no formal education,
and I write in stream of consciousness. In other words,
I don't take notes, I don't do anything. I write
as if I'm talking to myself and having a conversation
with maybe let's let's call it the readers, or in
(04:57):
this case, between the characters. And what what I did
was I woke up every single morning at four o'clock
in the morning. I sat there with my two dogs
and my cat and from four o'clock to six o'clock
I drank my coffee and I started to type. And
since I'm not a very fast typer, it took ten
months and I finished the book on October thirty first,
(05:18):
twenty ten, and I never skipped today.
Speaker 4 (05:20):
All right, Mary, you and I have got to take
a bit of a cliffhanger here because I have to
take a two minute commercial break here chex O donation.
My very special guest of this hour is Maury Richfield.
He's the author of Mister Brees www dot misterbreeselanovel dot com.
Maury and Iver will be back in two minutes. Donk away.
(05:45):
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(06:26):
zero for the best of the paranormal, parapsychology and sci
fi radio programming anywhere twenty four seven, three sixty five.
Welcome back everyone. Maury Richfield is my special guest to
this hour. He's the author of Mister Brees. His website
is www dot Got you pencils ready? I know you do,
mister breesthenovel dot com and you can get a copy
(06:49):
of Mister Brees on Amazon dot com and Barnes and
Noble right now. And Mari, thanks very much for joining us.
But let me ask you a question. I am I'm
sure I've been asked these questions many times. What do
you think what happened if the creator, no matter what
religious philosophy you believe in, and Lord knows there's enough
(07:10):
of them today, would come down and sayda I'm here.
Speaker 5 (07:16):
Well, first of all, we'd probably put them in a
saying asylum. Here's the thing. And this is one of
the what if questions I asked myself. We all have
our beliefs, I mean, various religions, various things, our history,
and what if our maker came down and basically said,
your truths, all of your truths are not true. What
(07:40):
would we do? We'd be all stuck. I mean, it's
just okay, well everything you believe is wrong, so it,
you know, and I'm not I didn't write mister Breese
to insult anyone's religions or anyone's beliefs. But or but
what if everyone's truth turned out to not be true?
Speaker 4 (07:58):
But you know what, that's that's that is a legitimate question,
and it takes a very special kind of person to
actually have the hutzpah or the cajones or the brass
wants to ask it in today's society. I admire you, Yes,
thank you.
Speaker 5 (08:15):
You know it's it's not an easy question for people
to swallow. And there might be some people who would say, oh, blasphemy,
or I'm a heretic, or whatever it might be. But
this book is not about an insulting anyone's belief as
I said, it is about offering another viewpoint.
Speaker 4 (08:33):
An alternative could be true. You know, I asked the
same question about six years ago. I said, what if
God was the devil and the devil really was God?
Speaker 5 (08:44):
Well, that's interesting that you should ask that question, because revelation.
The sequel actually has a lot to do with those aspects,
and I don't want to give that away, but there
are we all have our beliefs, sure, and they're there.
And I am all for everyone believing whatever it is
that they want to believe. But mister Breeze is a
(09:06):
if you, if you, if you're an open have an
open mind, you have an open heart, You're gonna read
this book and you're gonna say to yourself, Wow, Okay,
it's a it's a really neat story because I'm really
just a storyteller, and it's and if it's inspirational, it
says to people be a better person ford sake, and
(09:26):
that's not here. It is telling you to be one.
Speaker 4 (09:28):
And that's the message we need to get across in
today's world. Look at all the fighting, look at all
the sickness, look at all the hunger, look at the unemployment,
look at the homeless. You know, we need to hear
words of inspiration in these days.
Speaker 5 (09:43):
I agree, And sometimes those words of inspiration can come
from just the concept of just you know, taking reality
away for a second and using that whole theory of
willful suspension of reality and bury yourself into a story
like this and coming away and looking in the mirror
and saying what can I do to be a better person?
(10:03):
And if everybody does it, well, I mean we have
a much better world.
Speaker 3 (10:07):
I think I agree with you.
Speaker 4 (10:08):
And you know when I use the parallel between mister
Brees and It's a wonderful life. I don't think there's
one person listening tonight who does not at some time
during the Christmas season look for that movie because it
touches our hearts. We all want to see good things happen.
(10:29):
We all want a happy ending at the end of
the story, where do you think that people are making
their biggest mistake today? As how would mister Breese look
at the world, or how does mister Brees look at
the world?
Speaker 5 (10:48):
Mister Brees looks at the world and thinks that we
have given up our humanity for our technology. Yeah, and
he believes that we have substituted talking for texting emailing,
and we an in person contact for video chats, and
our kids, instead of outside playing are inside in front
(11:09):
of televisions and handheld video games. And it's easy, I
mean in his mind, at least, it's killing it simple
when you get to push a button and you don't
have to look the person in the eye to do it.
We're fair. Has become a question of here, I'm going
to kill you. I'm three times eight thousand miles away,
but I'm going to blow you up, and he in
(11:31):
his mind, our technology has not given us anything except
for making us less human.
Speaker 4 (11:39):
You know, I had a guest on the show a
number of years ago who said the number six sixty
six that has depicted as the mark of the devil
is actually the new Www.
Speaker 5 (11:53):
Well, I don't know if I would. I don't know
if I would go that far. I have seen firsthand myself.
How you know, people have conversations with each other in
the same house and they're actually texting on them on
their phones, and that seems a bit abnormal to me.
For some people, it's norm.
Speaker 4 (12:09):
My sister in law lets all the kids know in
her house by texting them, and now I find it ridiculous,
especially when all you have to do is go to
the bottom of the staircase and yell upsoppers ready, that's
all My parents did it. And do you know what
I do with my kids, my grandkids, I kick them
out of the house. Without their their blackberries, without their
(12:30):
cell phones. And when you want, when they come here
to see my wife and I, they have to put
their cell phones, their their iPads, their iPods, or whatever
the eye is of the day in a box that
we have beside the front door, on a table. You
come to see us, you don't need that.
Speaker 5 (12:47):
Well, you know, I'm fifty five years old. I did
not come from wealthy background. And when I was a child,
I tease people and I tell my kids that the
only toy I had was a shoe box a stick
But the truth of the matter is that we were
out there playing stickball, we were playing catch, we were
playing games. There was no such thing obviously in video
(13:09):
games or computers for people. But today things are different.
And I'm not saying that we need to remove all
these things. And I and the book, as I said,
it's a fictional thing. But and you, when you asked
the question of what mister Brees would think, I think
he would think that our society has become far less
humane and far less civilized than it was before all this.
Speaker 4 (13:34):
Now, you, as a youngster, I understood, left home for
four years to be with a grateful dead What was
that like, and how did that that experience influence mister Brees.
Speaker 5 (13:49):
Well, I've always I guess I heard my first Grateful
Dead song when I was about nine years old, and
I guess I just sort of fell into that sort
of I was in the end of the hippie era,
I mean by a few years, but I got an
early start, and it influenced me in a way to
see people and see things without prejudices and without you know,
(14:14):
putting people on your rich, you're poor, you're black, you're white,
you're eight year American, you're not American. It was just
everybody enjoying music and it didn't matter who you were
back then. I mean, obviously things have changed, but it's
the way I think still. I mean, like I said,
I've been fortunate a man without much education to achieve
(14:38):
what I have, and I've been fortunate enough to make
this dream of mine come true. But I think it
all comes down to how open minded you really are.
And from what I see in this country, at least
with the elections coming and everything else, people are not
really open minds anymore. They just think this is if
somebody says something, it's true without proof or at all.
(15:02):
I mean look at political ads.
Speaker 4 (15:03):
Oh my god, that's so that's you know that if
if if our kids watch this, they're going to get
the total wrong impression of how how elections or and
and how society should be acting.
Speaker 3 (15:15):
And when you listen to the to.
Speaker 4 (15:17):
The political leaders of today and they just open their
mouths to change feet.
Speaker 5 (15:25):
I would tend to agree with you there. And you
asked me what our make what would happen if our
Maker did come down, and ijkingly said, we'd put them
in an asylum, But we would not believe because we
everybody who wants to be a believer would never really believe,
because they would He would.
Speaker 2 (15:41):
Have to show proof exactly.
Speaker 5 (15:43):
And chances are that proof would have to be such
intense power over all of us that we would succumb
and submit, and we would, and there would be a
great deal of us, maybe all of us, who would
find out that whatever we believe isn't right. So, I mean,
I'm not so sure a lot of people would be
(16:03):
hoping for the Maker to be coming back right because
it may prove us a great many of us, or
all of us wrong about a great and anything exce
o nation.
Speaker 3 (16:12):
My guess this hour is Maury Richfield.
Speaker 4 (16:14):
He's the author of Mister Brees www dot mister breesthovel
dot com. So when you were with the Grateful Dead,
tell us a little bit about that.
Speaker 5 (16:27):
Well, I mean, I think it was more. I think
anybody who had ever spent a lot of time going
to Grateful Dead shows would probably understand what it was like.
It was a community. People shared things with each other.
You know. I'm not going to get into the somewhat
illegal aspects of things that went on there. I think
everybody pretty much knows that. But it was a time
(16:48):
of joy. It was all about the music and people
would dance around, and most of them weren't straight. But
it just turned out that it was just a free
for all. I'm not going to call it a love
in because it wasn't really like that. It was just
a community of people all with one common interest. And
you don't see that so much anymore. I mean, people
(17:09):
may follow bands and they say, but the days of
the sixties and the seventies when I was doing it,
those are different times.
Speaker 4 (17:17):
Yeah, it wasn't so commercialized like bands today are out
for the almighty dollar. Back in our day, bands were
out there because they believed in the cause, they believed
in their music, and they wanted to make a positive difference.
Speaker 5 (17:33):
It wasn't a stage show, and it didn't have rights,
and they didn't change costumes sixty five times, and you know,
nobody's boobs fell out of the stage. It was just
you know, I get's java may have fallen down a
couple times, but you know what, that's just the way
things were back then. And I'm believing I'm not longing
for a return for those things that I'm not even
saying it should happen, but it's certainly it was the
(17:57):
basis of a lot of the beliefs that I grew
up with, and and and the things that influenced me
as an adult.
Speaker 4 (18:05):
Stand by, Maury, you and I have to take our
news break at the bottom of the amarexone Nation. A
refreshing hour this hour with my guest Maury Richfield. He's
the author of Mister Brees the Novel. It's available on
Amazon dot com and Barnes and Noble, and visit his
website www dot Mister Brees the Novel dot com and
(18:26):
Maury Richfield and I will be back on the other
side of the news and some words from my fine
sponsors as the xone continues with yours truly, Rob McConnell,
from our studios in beautiful Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Speaker 3 (18:37):
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Speaker 3 (20:04):
For the best of.
Speaker 4 (20:05):
The paranormal Parapsychology and Sci Fi Radio Programming Anywhere twenty
four seven, three sixty five and welcome back to the
X On everyone. Maury Richfield is my special guest. He's
the author of Mister Brees the Novel. His website is
www dot mister breesth novel dot com. As the author, what,
(20:27):
in your opinion is the most exciting part within the
story of Mister Brees.
Speaker 5 (20:34):
I think the most exciting part is the fact that
the mister Brees chooses a man named Michael Ryon, who
is an unbeliever. He has he's basically he's picked because
he's in a very unique situation he could write and
unlike most of us who become unbelievers because of life situation,
(20:55):
this particular man never believes in anything, even as a child,
and if the story tells, is also about his transformation
and what happens to him as he witnesses these magnificent,
sometimes unbelievable feats, and as time goes by, mister Brees
reveals to him who he really is. And the book
(21:17):
itself is kind of designed that way, so it kind
of keeps people's interest, but it also isn't really that
hard to read. Because I didn't want some book, and
I've read things by writers that are so complicated you
need to get a dictionary out to figure out what
they're talking about.
Speaker 3 (21:34):
What do you say, mister Brees?
Speaker 4 (21:36):
Would if I was sitting down talking to mister Brees,
and would he tell me the world of today is
so complicated because we humans have complicated it, where actually
life is very simple.
Speaker 5 (21:50):
Well, I think that what mister Brees would tell you
is that he had given us certain abilities, certain characteristics,
certain intellectual capabilities, and we use them in the wrong way.
And I think he would be He would probably tell
you that he's not happy about it. And I don't
(22:11):
know about you and or the listeners out there, but
if our maker suddenly came to me while I was
in the shower in the morning and looked at me
and said it's judgment time, fella, I'd be shaking in
my shoes.
Speaker 3 (22:23):
You and me both, my friend.
Speaker 5 (22:25):
You know, and I think most people would be sure.
So I think that's what he would tell you.
Speaker 4 (22:30):
What is the main message that you, as the author
of mister Breeze, would like your reader to walk away with.
Speaker 5 (22:40):
I'd like him to First of all, I'd like him
to say I can't wait for the sequel and can't
wait to make it, to see it on the big
screen and make them make a movie out of it.
That would be good. But I think after that, I
would like people to think that they were not only entertained,
but they were moved in some way and to a
point where they'd like to say to themselves, you know,
maybe I can do something a little nicer, and be
(23:03):
a little nicer, and be a little better, and be
a little more open minded and not blow my horn
and at every person in the middle of traffic and
that kind of thing. That's what I mean. I'm not
hoping for any giant movements here, but the little bit
of hope would be good.
Speaker 4 (23:20):
We were talking about the Grateful Dead and the movement
before we went to our news break at the bottom
of the hour. I've always said that the hippies had
the right idea. They just their timing was a little off.
Speaker 5 (23:35):
I tend to think you might be right. There was
I mean, it was that whole. I mean, let's face it.
I mean, Make Love Not War is a pretty good
team to say, sure, give piece a chance, is yeah.
I mean, you know you're watching John Lennon and Yoko
sitting in a bed, you know, you know, saying they
just want to have it. They're going to have a
peace rally laying there. I mean it was considered a
(23:57):
publicity stunt by some people, silly others, but you know
what it was somebody trying to do something.
Speaker 4 (24:04):
Sure it did wonders for the Queen Elizabeth Hotel in
Montreal where they pulled off the peace movement in bed. Yeah,
we're great for them.
Speaker 5 (24:13):
Yeah, but to see one person can't change the world,
but one person could change themselves.
Speaker 4 (24:18):
Well yeah, plus one person can start the wheel moving
like you know, look what happened with Jesus. He was
one person and look what happened all the years later.
How many people are following him based on his movement?
Speaker 5 (24:30):
That's true? Yeah, and there you know, I mean we all,
everybody follows everybody. The word God that we seem to
throw around so much, all all of us or many
of us is you know, they've been using that word.
I don't know how long, but the Greek shoes it,
I mean long before Jesus was ever born, and certainly
(24:51):
it's been the Chinese. Everybody has had some form of
God in their civilization through as far back as we
have records almost.
Speaker 4 (25:00):
But I've often asked my guests this question, do we
or was the creation of God by humanity a way
of explaining the unexplainable at a time when so little
was known about anything? And do we use God and
the devil? As escape goes, well, thank god I got this,
(25:20):
instead of saying, you know what, I worked hard for that,
or the devil made me do it. Instead of saying, hey,
you know what I did that I screwed up. I'm sorry,
it's easier to pass the buck.
Speaker 5 (25:31):
Well, that's true, And and and some of the answers
to those questions mister Breeze gives Michael Ryan in the book,
I mean and one of the main things that he
allowed us to believe in certain things at a time because,
in his in his words, we were young and foolish.
(25:52):
And you know, he talked about at one point when
we were nothing but crawling around on the ground where
he had to take away our weapons from a number
of times because we started hitting each other with them
and giving And let's put it this way. You put
a bunch of people in a room, in a group,
and somebody wants to take charge. That's just the way
things work in our world today. Somebody has to be
(26:15):
in charge. The question is why, Well, because I don't.
Speaker 4 (26:19):
I don't think that that anybody or that the majority
of people want to take their responsibility of being leaders,
because you a leader is responsible for the actions of
those behind him. Usually except in Washington and Ottawa, you know,
because once you become a leader, it's your neck that's
(26:42):
on the line. And in today's society, a lot of
people say, hey, I don't want to get involved. And
this is where a big part of the problem is, well.
Speaker 5 (26:51):
You know, I don't want to give to you. I
don't want to give away the sequel yet. But there's
one particular thing that Michael Ryan asked mister b he's
in this sequel revelation, and he says to him, he goes,
but I'm just an ordinary man. And mister Breeze answers
him and says, all men are ordinary until they do
something extraordinary. And I believe that is true. We are
(27:15):
all just ordinary people until we do something extraordinary. And
maybe that's something extraordinary is to change yourself, and maybe
that's something extraordinary, is to find a cure for something
but we all have it in us to do something
extraordinary for ourselves. I believe that. And as far as
politicians and leaders and things like that, it's unfortunate that
(27:37):
the wars that are started in the world and throughout
the world are generally started by old men and usually
fought by young men. And it's just you know, if
you look back in history, we have fought wars over
different beliefs in religion and territories and some of the
silliest things. I mean that you could think about we
(28:00):
thought war was over, you know, and if you want
to talk about the hippie thing, let's that's definitely make
love not war, because we could have avoid an awful
lot of wars if we had done that.
Speaker 3 (28:11):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (28:11):
And of course, during the during the time of the
hippie evolution as I like to call it, Vietnam was
going on a totally senseless war that many of us
just watched as as friends and neighbors and loved ones
were put you know, we're never came home. I know myself.
(28:33):
I have a number of relatives that lost their lives
in the Vietnam War, and you know, to me, it
was a useless, senseless war. I mean, it certainly put
a lot of money in a lot of pockets in
the big industries in the United States. But when you
look at the amount of lives lost and for what
(28:53):
there was no reason, there was no real cause, there
was no real threat.
Speaker 5 (28:58):
Well, I tend to agree with you there, and I
think that that some people could make the argument for
almost every war that is that you know that has happened.
I mean, we we we fought a war, I mean
in this country, in the United States. We fought many wars,
I mean even ones against ourselves for various reasons. But
any time that you lose lives for something that gains
(29:21):
you nothing, you you you're definitely fighting a worthless war,
at a useless war. And that I believe that.
Speaker 4 (29:29):
Does mister Breeze touch on the topic of alternative energy
and what's happening in the world today with the fossil
fuelling missions, global warming and and the fight conquest for oil.
Speaker 5 (29:42):
No, mister, mister, we don't. It doesn't go that deep.
It's a It basically looks at the human spirit, and
it looks as at our history and mankind itself and
how we have evolved. And you know, basically Michael Ryan,
who is the person I only tell you about who's
(30:03):
writing the story. Mister Brees following him is fighting, mister
Breeds for our continued existence because believe me, our existence
is certainly not guaranteed as far as mister Brees is concerned.
Speaker 4 (30:17):
Well, does mister Brees pose the possibility that he may
wipe out our existence?
Speaker 5 (30:24):
Yes, and mister Brees leaves us for the message, and
that message is done. The last you know is in
the book, and what we do with that message is
the basis for the sequel revelation. And this is as
I said, our existence is certainly not guaranteed. And given
(30:47):
his feelings at the moment and giving us, we're basically
getting one last chance. And mister the reason that mister
Brees finally sought out Michael Ryan to tell this story
and to write these and did all these Baracuis the
things and showed himself as God to all of us
is so we would learn something finally, and to give
(31:08):
us one last chance to change.
Speaker 4 (31:11):
What was that all important lesson that mister Brees was
trying to get across.
Speaker 5 (31:17):
Well, basically, mister Brees is trying to say that he
we we we're we're giving a few choices, and I
don't want to give too much away because the whole idea,
of course, is I'd like to get people to actually
buy the book, so and I don't want to tell
them the whole story. But it's he says to us,
or he says to Michael Ryan, to convey to us
that you know, we subjugate our fellow man. We we
(31:40):
kill our own children, We enslave. We were still enslave
people we kill for no reason. We have destroyed ourselves
by by trying to be in and our egos and
our arrogance are beyond belief. As if we are the
only thing that is important, and he wants us to
know we are not.
Speaker 3 (32:02):
What else is there?
Speaker 5 (32:05):
I guess we're gonna find out.
Speaker 4 (32:07):
No, I mean, if we do not consider ourselves as important,
how do we succeed?
Speaker 5 (32:15):
Well, I think if you look. I mean, as I said,
I don't want to give too much away. But mister
Breeze offers us another alternative and gives us a chance
to either change ourselves or he will put the alternative
into effect. But that's what I kind of believe that
(32:35):
our maker would do if he saw our situation. I
mean you asked before, what happens if he shows up,
if he sees what we become. Do you think he's
gonna go patting us on the head and say, nice fellas,
Nice ladies. You guys done a great job and you
got a beer. I mean, I don't think.
Speaker 4 (32:52):
So let me ask you a question. What happens if
there is no maker? That the entire philosophy about a maker,
a creator, or is nothing else but a croc and
we're responsible to ourselves.
Speaker 5 (33:04):
Ah interesting fact. And see, one of the things that
mister Breeze really is is you see, we use the
word God because God is the most omnipotent thing we
can think of. But if you read the book and
you read as I said, it offers a different perspective
(33:26):
as to who God really is. And you touched on
it a little before. But I don't want to, you know,
I just said, I want to give too much away.
But I said, what happens if there was this being
there was just so powerful that we couldn't figure out
anything else he was except for God.
Speaker 4 (33:41):
Well, you see the way I see it is I
think God or whoever this being is, gave us a
hint in the Book of Genesis when he said, and
God said, let us create man in our image, our likeness,
because if in fact we are created in his likeness
and his image, then we're all each and every one
of us gods.
Speaker 5 (34:01):
That could be triple. The problem is, as Eyebo and
as mister Brees points out, he gave us rules. His
words to Michael Ryan in one of their discussions, was
he didn't give us a Bible, he didn't give us
a Tora, he didn't give us any religious books. He
gave us a bunch of rules, and he didn't give
(34:22):
us religion. We gave religion to ourselves.
Speaker 4 (34:25):
All right, stand by, we've got to take our final
break here explanation.
Speaker 3 (34:29):
Maury Richfield is our.
Speaker 4 (34:30):
Guest www dot Mister Brees the novel dot com. His book,
Mister Brees is available at Amazon dot com and Barnes
and Noble. My name is Rob McConnell. We'll be back
on the other side of this commercial break as the
Exone continues around the world from our studios in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Speaker 3 (34:51):
Don't go away.
Speaker 2 (34:55):
This is the Excellon Broadcast Network Broadcasting worldwarde on Broadcast
as to affiliates and Savoy program providers including CNN Broadcast Network,
Serious Sidellite Network, Star Media, Good News Radio Network, Angel
Broadcast Network, WIKI Broadcast Network, and WPBNTV. For more information
(35:18):
on the Broadcast Network, visit us at www dot XZBM
dot net.
Speaker 4 (35:30):
And welcome back everyone in. Our guest to this hour
is Maury Richfield. We're talking to more about his book
that is currently out entitled Mister Brees. It's available at
Amazon dot com, Barnes and Noble, and his website is
www dot misterbreesthanovel dot com. And there is a Mister
Brees sequel in the works. The working title is Revelation
(35:53):
the Return of Mister Brees. The second book is about
how we take the message from the first book and
what we do with it. First of all, Mario, I
want to thank you so much for joining us. It's
been a great pleasure talking to you. I wish you
much success, and I can hardly wait until we see
you on the big screen.
Speaker 5 (36:12):
Well, hopefully, I keep waiting for that phone call from Hollywood.
I guess I might have to wait a little longer,
you know, one of these days soon, I think it'll come.
Speaker 4 (36:20):
Well, what's the final message that you'd like to leave
with the x O nation tonight, Maury.
Speaker 5 (36:25):
Well, I think i'd like to I would hope that
everyone who that First of all, as I said, mister,
Breeze is not a book that is designed to insult
anyone's beliefs. It is not a book to offer some
new religious cult. It is basically a complete work of
fiction that is designed to be somehow uplifting, engaging, and
(36:48):
an interesting and story that you can take in. And
as I said, if you have an open mind and
an open heart, I think you'll enjoy it as what
it is, which is a unique. From what I'm told,
there's never been anything written anywhere near like it before,
so I hope everyone will enjoy it.
Speaker 4 (37:08):
Now, when do you expect the release of your sequel, Well.
Speaker 5 (37:12):
It appears from what I'm told that it will be
out in January. It's just about finished and it got
to go through the editing process, but hopefully it will
be out in January, maybe.
Speaker 4 (37:22):
Earlier, so we can look forward to it on Amazon
and Barnes and Noble.
Speaker 3 (37:28):
Just shortly after Christmas.
Speaker 4 (37:30):
Yes, alrighty, Once again, I want to thank you so
much for joining us It's been a great pleasure having
you on the show, and we look forward to speaking
to you again in the future.
Speaker 5 (37:39):
Well, I thank you so much. I look forward to
coming back at some point in time. Have a wonderful night, and.
Speaker 3 (37:44):
You too, my friend.
Speaker 4 (37:46):
Once again, x O nation. Our guess this hour has
been Maury Richfield. His website is www dot mister breesethanovel
dot com, and we were talking to Mari about his
new book that is out. Well, it came out out
in the year twenty eleven and it's just picking up
steam now. Mister Brees and basically Mister Brees is a
(38:09):
provocative novel that offers hopes as it raises startling questions.
Speaker 3 (38:14):
About mankind's fate.
Speaker 4 (38:15):
Once again, www dot mister Brees. The novel and Mister
Brees is available on Amazon dot com and barnes Ennoble.
Let me see what else do we have to share
with our fine members of the Xzone Nation. Oh yeah,
there's new X Chronicles newspaper stand up and running. It's
at www dot x Chronicles, Dash Newspaper dot com, Forward
(38:42):
Slash Newspaper stand dot h t M and the xone
Book Club will be launching tomorrow evening another exciting part
as we keep on growing here in the X Zone. Jeez,
it just seems like twenty years ago we started in
a little station and look where we are today around
(39:05):
the world thanks to you, the members of the ex
Own Nation. I'll be back on the other side of
this commercial break at six and a half minutes past
the hour as we continue with yours truly, Rob McConnell
from our studios in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, dunk Away