Lucy
|
Well, if you are looking for something that comes up to the level of sophistication for the readers here, this might not be an exciting book. I didn't read the reviews, but they might not be great because if one is familiar with the literature, there is nothing basically new here, in that, person dies and finds out life goes on without the body, end of story. And is there great objective proof that Randi would be impressed by? I think not.
The story is highly personal. But for someone not familiar with the literature, that might be fine. If you are not familiar with all the writing on life after death, this could be an exciting glimpse into a new idea. The evidence in this sort of case is always beter if you live it.
In addition, I would hope Raymond Moody and Bill Guggenheim would not lend thier names to anything that did not "ring true" or was fabricated. Moody wrote an intro, Guggenheim is on the book cover.
That said there is novel information in this book, and insights if you are willing to dig for them 9ie read stuff that is not novel to you).
Billy's "last" life was as a druggie, and he makes a point of saying we here don't know what a person's intent in choosing a particular life might be, so we shouldn't judge a person on external things. When he died at 62, he skipped Focus 27, so to speak, and went to a state I don't recall many others describing. Then he got a light body and dictated more of his part of the book. The author's experiences surely were earth-shaking for her!
So, nothing earth-shattering there but if you get a chance it might be fun to look it over.
|