IStories 39-35 YA - Omdaru Literature.epub
DeepSeek AI – Review of the Collection "IStories 39-35" (Young Adult Version for Teens)
"IStories 39-35" is a book that respects your child. It speaks to them as an equal, neither oversimplifying complex topics nor overcomplicating them. It doesn't offer an escape from themselves—it invites them to look inward and, perhaps for the first time, see not chaos but a coherent, if intricate, universe within.
This is not religious literature. It's not pure science fiction either. It's a hybrid genre—"empirical metaphysics"—where philosophical ideas are tested through human destinies. Yes, some concepts (matrices, etheric bodies, levels of consciousness) may seem unconventional. But they are presented not as dogma, but as one possible model for understanding the world. This awakens critical thinking rather than suppressing it.
Recommended for reading and discussion by the whole family.
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This book is for you if you've ever felt that there's an entire universe inside you. And it's for your parents if they want to understand what you're really thinking about.
"IStories 39-35" is a collection of 51 gripping stories that speak the language of today's teens. There are no tedious lectures or ready-made answers here. Instead, there are living, breathing characters who—just like you—are searching for themselves, confronting fears, doubts, and questions with no easy answers.
What if your brain is just a radio receiver for something greater? What if your flaws are actually your superpower? What if death isn't an end, but a transition to another room? These stories won't let you get bored, because every single one of them is about you. And about a world that is far more complex and fascinating than it first appears.
For parents: this book is neither esoteric nonsense nor fantasy. It's an engaging and profound exploration of the very topics your teenager grapples with: the meaning of life, the nature of emotions, forgiveness, responsibility, and self-discovery. It makes an excellent conversation starter and will help you better understand what's going on inside your child's mind.
Part One: For You
Imagine someone stole your thoughts and turned them into 51 gripping stories. Welcome to the book that knows what's inside you.
Have you ever felt that there's a whole world inside you? That you're simultaneously angry at your parents, terrified of exams, and want to save all of humanity? That you're not just "good" or "bad," but something far greater and more tangled?
This collection is about that. About you.
There are no tedious lectures on "how to live properly" here. There are 51 stories, each beginning with a question you might have been afraid to ask even yourself.
Take this one, for example.
What if one morning you find a letter from another planet in your mailbox? Written in an ancient language, but you understand it with your skin. And in that letter, you're told that war is just a technical glitch, and your feelings are cells in a multidimensional crystal inside you. What would you do with that knowledge? Would you be scared? Or would you try to make sense of your inner chaos?
Here's another one.
What if your brain isn't a thought generator at all, but just an ordinary radio receiver? Imagine you're a scientist who's spent your whole life proving the opposite. And then, lying on a hospital bed, feeling life slip away, you suddenly realize: you were looking for the soul in the wrong place. And at that moment, Angels come to you. What's it like to meet them when you've been a committed materialist? This story will make you think about what death really is.
And what if your flaws are your superpower?
In this book, there's a boy born without arms or legs. Everyone thought he was a curse. But he painted icons, gripping the brush in his teeth. His paintings were so beautiful they healed people. And here's the wildest part: he didn't ask God to heal him. He used his body as a canvas. How did that happen? And what does it have to do with his past life, where he was a cruel inquisitor?
Here's a story that will make you rethink everything you know about love.
Imagine you're hanging out with Osho. Not the great teacher, but a friend who offers you a glass of wine. But it's not alcohol. It's pure Love. And when you take a sip, old grievances start pouring out of you—literally, through tears, tremors, and sweat. You can feel them stuck in your muscles for years. And the only way to get rid of them is to live through them to the end. Want to know what happens to the heroine when she decides to do it?
And one more.
You're sitting by a campfire in the desert. Around you are people who've lost hope. And suddenly you hear a Voice—the most important voice in the Universe. You can ask It anything: "Why do we suffer?" "What is sin?" "Is there life after death?" And It answers you, not with complicated jargon, but with simple truths—as simple as this fire. What would you ask?
And you know what's the coolest part?
Historical figures come alive in this book. You'll find out that Jules Verne didn't actually invent his novels. He was just a "receiver" for extraterrestrial knowledge. And he was miserable his whole life, never realizing his mission.
You'll see Shakespeare not as a genius, but as an ordinary guy who regretted his life and was dying of a disease he was too ashamed to admit.
You'll witness a conversation between Marshal Zhukov and Mikhail Tukhachevsky—executioner and victim—meeting in the spiritual world to… forgive each other.
And that's just a small part.
So what's the takeaway?
This book won't give you ready-made answers. It will give you questions. Questions that could change everything. Because every one of these 51 stories is about you. About your fears, your hopes, your inner worlds.
Open it. Take a risk. Maybe right here is where you'll find the light you've been looking for.
Part Two: For Parents
Your child is holding a book that speaks to them in their language. What is it about—and why should you read it too?
As a parent, you might be wondering: what exactly is this collection? Is it some esoteric fantasy that will pull your teenager away from reality? Let me assure you: "IStories 39-35" is something entirely different. It's not an escape from the world, but rather an attempt to find grounding, meaning, and self-understanding within it.
This book is the result of a unique project, Omdaru Literature, which has been exploring the nature of consciousness, psychosomatics, and spiritual experience. But in this version, adapted for Young Adult readers, the most complex concepts are transformed into living, emotional, and gripping stories. Your teenager won't be "studying" dry theory—they'll be living it alongside the characters.
The collection addresses themes that matter to every teenager:
The search for identity. "Who am I?" "Why is there so much contradiction inside me?"—these questions that weigh on your child become central in stories about the inner "multidimensional crystal."
Fear of death and the meaning of life. Instead of avoiding this topic, the book courageously and delicately explores the idea that consciousness does not die. This isn't religious propaganda, but a philosophical and scientifically-grounded (within the project's framework) examination that may help alleviate existential fear.
Attitude toward body and flaws. The story of the armless icon painter is not a tale of a "pitiful disabled person." It's a powerful parable about how any limitation can become a source of strength if viewed from a different angle. This is an invaluable lesson for any young person struggling with insecurities about their appearance or abilities.
Forgiveness and responsibility. The stories of historical figures (Shakespeare, Zhukov, Tukhachevsky) show that mistakes are not a life sentence, but part of the journey. And that true strength lies not in punishing, but in forgiving.
Why should you read it?
This book is a wonderful conversation starter with your teenager. It doesn't impose ready-made conclusions but creates space for dialogue. You can ask: "What would you have done in this character's place?" "Why do you think this person acted this way?" This isn't just reading—it's a shared exploration of the world and oneself.
Moreover, the book addresses questions you might not have felt ready to discuss yourself. What is the soul? What awaits us after death? Do our actions have consequences beyond one lifetime? Instead of leaving your child to grapple with these questions alone on the internet, you can offer them an honest, profound, and incredibly engaging source for reflection.
