Publication Date:April 25, 2008 Shipping:Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability:Usually ships in 24 hours
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a book that excites meApril 6, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Why does reading this book lighten me up?
Part of it is the authenticity of the author's voice, the warmth that comes through as he talks of his experience with the afterlife and his deepening relationship with his Higher Self. Sometimes you read an account of people's spiritual explorations and one comes away with the feeling that a salesman has been trying to sell you something, a set of beliefs or limitations. There is nothing like that here. This book is a delight. I came away from reading this book with an excitement and lightheartedness about my own path & life, a feeling of infinite possibilities.
There is something exhilarating about entering into different viewpoints. To read of the perspectives both of the recently deceased and those beings offering assistance to them... the dialogues with Higher Self, gives me something that is rare for a book to give; it excites something in me, wakes something up inside. I feel spacious, larger than my own ordinary ideas of myself, a relaxed confidence flows forth.
There is much here, food for thought & food for the heart.
Excellent Afterlife Offering From Gordon PhinnFebruary 10, 2008 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
More Adventures in Eternity has touched me as few books have (I have read a prepublication copy). A worthy follow-on to Gordon Phinn's first book "Eternal Life and How to Enjoy It: A First-Hand Account," this second volume is a combination of adventures in the spirit lands and insights into life both here and there, expressed in the author's dense but easy-to-take writing style.
While this is not an entry level book, there's a lot of good material for all readers. It helps to be familiar with the works of Robert Monroe, Bruce Moen and others and it is best if you can absorb the Gordon Phinn's first work before tackling this one. Still, there is much to enjoy for all readers willing to enter into the refreshingly happy spirit of this writing.
The brief description of the creation of the earth is a classic and oh so different from other approaches to this subject. The retrieval stories, which are not limited to efforts of physically alive human beings but include intriguing stories from "Henry" (Gordon's alter-ego in the spirit realms), are particularly instructive in understanding how the retrieval process works. The higher self material is definitive and uplifting, very helpful to this reader in understanding the role of higher self during this lifetime. We are, indeed, here for a wonderful purpose.
I am ready for a whole series of books such as this one, full of adventures, retrievals and wonderful insights into life here and there. And Gordon Phinn's writing earns my respect in another way. In a refreshing contrast to the self-importance and presumed sense of truth possessed by some New Age writers, the author does not own a dogmatic certainty about everything he writes, and I appreciate his comment about that: "Until then, I hope the reader can relax in my uncertainty and still enjoy the ride."
This reader can and does.
Joe Meboe Ordinary human being.
Eternal Life and How to Enjoy It: A First-Hand Account