Acamenon, (9786501702353) — Readings Books

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Acamenon
Paperback

Acamenon

$42.99
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The Heart of the Stars: A Journey Within Acamenon and the Bridge of Hope is Volume II of the series The Heart of the Stars, which began with Badu: The Archmage, a fable written for younger children. If the first book followed the awakening of little Badu and his discovery that true magic is born of love, the journey now grows deeper and more demanding. It invites the reader to face existential and spiritual dilemmas within the framework of an epic narrative. Amid Battles, a Descent into the Heart In this second volume, we follow Badu, Acamenon, Canissa, and Terbrum in their struggle against Malinerus-the shadow born from a thirst for power without love, threatening to plunge the universe into darkness. He commands Cinidia and the Acaladins, the serpent people, in their attempt to conquer Lenora, Terbrum's ancestral city, where lions guard the Duranium, a magical stone symbolic of immemorial times. Yet the adventure leads the heroes on an inward path, a true katabasis-a descent into the heart. Here Acamenon confronts the pain of loss and learns to transform it into living memory. This intimate journey prepares the hero's apotheosis, when guilt is transfigured into forgiveness and sorrow into hope, opening the way to reconciliation with himself and with others. A Fable of Many Layers The narrative resonates with the existential philosophy of Soren Kierkegaard and Viktor Frankl, for whom loving in the face of despair is a leap of faith that gives meaning to suffering. Emmanuel Levinas's ethics of alterity, which establishes the face of the other as the foundation of responsibility, is recalled. It evokes Simone Weil's kenosis, the voluntary renunciation of force in order to live love, and Martin Buber's relational vision, where true encounter occurs in the I-Thou relationship. The book also unfolds within Joseph Campbell's hero's journey and Mircea Eliade's archetypal cosmogony. It draws on Carl Gustav Jung's psychoanalysis to show that facing one's shadow and working through grief are essential steps in the making of the hero. An Aesthetic and Human Experience But the experience goes beyond words. The Renaissance-inspired illustrations-crafted with the support of artificial intelligence-translate into images the principles of Perry Nodelman and Maria Nikolajeva, who argue that the interplay between text and image should open new pathways of meaning rather than merely repeat the narrative. In light of neuroaesthetics, these visual metaphors awaken emotional and cognitive resonance, enriching the reader's symbolic experience. The book also invites shared reading: parents, educators, and children can dialogue about its symbols and dilemmas, making the story a space for pedagogical mediation in the spirit of Lev Vygotsky. For this reason, it is recommended for independent reading from ages 10 to 12, when children are more prepared for complex symbolic abstractions. It is also suitable for shared reading from age 9, where adult-child dialogue brings images and values to life. Adolescents and young adults will likewise discover here an adventure that unites fantasy, philosophy, and spirituality. A Cosmic and Formative Fable Acamenon and the Bridge of Hope is a cosmic, formative fable-one that weaves myth, philosophy, psychoanalysis, spirituality, pedagogy, and art. It offers readers not only a magical journey but also an aesthetic and human experience of self-discovery and meaning. In the end, it teaches us that there is no pain that cannot be transformed, no fall that cannot be redeemed-for true light is born when we learn to forgive ourselves and begin again in love.

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Format
Paperback
Publisher
Leonardo M. Pontes
Date
30 September 2025
Pages
86
ISBN
9786501702353

The Heart of the Stars: A Journey Within Acamenon and the Bridge of Hope is Volume II of the series The Heart of the Stars, which began with Badu: The Archmage, a fable written for younger children. If the first book followed the awakening of little Badu and his discovery that true magic is born of love, the journey now grows deeper and more demanding. It invites the reader to face existential and spiritual dilemmas within the framework of an epic narrative. Amid Battles, a Descent into the Heart In this second volume, we follow Badu, Acamenon, Canissa, and Terbrum in their struggle against Malinerus-the shadow born from a thirst for power without love, threatening to plunge the universe into darkness. He commands Cinidia and the Acaladins, the serpent people, in their attempt to conquer Lenora, Terbrum's ancestral city, where lions guard the Duranium, a magical stone symbolic of immemorial times. Yet the adventure leads the heroes on an inward path, a true katabasis-a descent into the heart. Here Acamenon confronts the pain of loss and learns to transform it into living memory. This intimate journey prepares the hero's apotheosis, when guilt is transfigured into forgiveness and sorrow into hope, opening the way to reconciliation with himself and with others. A Fable of Many Layers The narrative resonates with the existential philosophy of Soren Kierkegaard and Viktor Frankl, for whom loving in the face of despair is a leap of faith that gives meaning to suffering. Emmanuel Levinas's ethics of alterity, which establishes the face of the other as the foundation of responsibility, is recalled. It evokes Simone Weil's kenosis, the voluntary renunciation of force in order to live love, and Martin Buber's relational vision, where true encounter occurs in the I-Thou relationship. The book also unfolds within Joseph Campbell's hero's journey and Mircea Eliade's archetypal cosmogony. It draws on Carl Gustav Jung's psychoanalysis to show that facing one's shadow and working through grief are essential steps in the making of the hero. An Aesthetic and Human Experience But the experience goes beyond words. The Renaissance-inspired illustrations-crafted with the support of artificial intelligence-translate into images the principles of Perry Nodelman and Maria Nikolajeva, who argue that the interplay between text and image should open new pathways of meaning rather than merely repeat the narrative. In light of neuroaesthetics, these visual metaphors awaken emotional and cognitive resonance, enriching the reader's symbolic experience. The book also invites shared reading: parents, educators, and children can dialogue about its symbols and dilemmas, making the story a space for pedagogical mediation in the spirit of Lev Vygotsky. For this reason, it is recommended for independent reading from ages 10 to 12, when children are more prepared for complex symbolic abstractions. It is also suitable for shared reading from age 9, where adult-child dialogue brings images and values to life. Adolescents and young adults will likewise discover here an adventure that unites fantasy, philosophy, and spirituality. A Cosmic and Formative Fable Acamenon and the Bridge of Hope is a cosmic, formative fable-one that weaves myth, philosophy, psychoanalysis, spirituality, pedagogy, and art. It offers readers not only a magical journey but also an aesthetic and human experience of self-discovery and meaning. In the end, it teaches us that there is no pain that cannot be transformed, no fall that cannot be redeemed-for true light is born when we learn to forgive ourselves and begin again in love.

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Format
Paperback
Publisher
Leonardo M. Pontes
Date
30 September 2025
Pages
86
ISBN
9786501702353