Here are some facts about what happens in this book that are far from boring and ordinary in my opinion. The Jesus character in this book suggests a set of criteria for emotional maturity and offers that we are emotional beings prior to mental, which has never been done in the history of consciousness, he metaphysically deconstructs the shadow behind faith in all religions, directly contradicts major tenets of Christianity including the idea that Yeshua died on the cross, dismisses the notion of healthy unconditional love, offers an entirely new architecture of reality and Divine Being, metaphysically reconciles the existence of a Divine Being and the Nondual in the same reality....to name a few. Yes, he drinks Corona and eats quesadillas, and sits around the pool, giving the reader some much needed breaks amidst a clever story and deep teachings.
How a reviewer could say that this book is without insight is beyond me. Of course, everyone is free to agree or disagree with what is presented, but what troubles me is that rather than simply disagree with what is offered, people either make up stuff and/or make personal attacks, which to me is just proof that their cobbled together values have been threatened in some way--which is exactly what the book warns about on page 1. I so wish people could be conscious of their own reactions enough to track this.
I have read this book several times and get more out of it each time. It's a great way to ease into an introduction to the paradigm of Theohumanity, to get a feeling of what it's like, and a good, psychoemotionally transparent love story too.
But please, decide for yourself, don't believe this review or any other, but I invite you to pay attention when the truth is blatantly misrepresented and wonder why someone would do that.