Customer Reviews:
Yes it is December 30, 2008 Another reviewer has said that this book is "more of the same," in terms of being similar to One Last Time. I think that was the point in publishing it, if I'm not mistaken. One Last Time was popular for its accounts of John's encounters with those who have passed over. Some of us... well, I guess we just can't get enough of those personal accounts. So, to my mind--keep them coming!
Excellent read. Very interesting. December 21, 2008 I liked this book because I, myself have been doing psychic readings for many years but haven't been able to move into the mediumship area of it,and after reading his book I thought it is only a matter of experience and determination. The book showed he is a normal guy who after many years of practice has opened his psyche. He is an awesome medium, and he is also a great person, father and husband. A normal person with talent. Gives me hope.
incredible read September 10, 2008 I found this book to be incredibly moving and it had me thinking about so many things I hadn't thought about before. This is by far the best of John's books.
A little disappointed June 9, 2008 I think John Edward is genuine, and I loved "One Last Time." But I found this book to be a little tedious. It contains too many long transcripts of his readings. They go on and on and on. I've been reading it when I have trouble falling asleep.
Help for the bereaved October 13, 2007 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
For those who are skeptical about life after death or heaven/god, this book is probably only going to annoy you. For those seeking some comfort for a loss, this is probably a very good book for you.
I've been a nurse since "Moses" and have worked in ICU, the ICU float pool, and PACU in a university hospital for most of that time. I finally had to stop doing it, because I found that I had exhausted my capacity to deal with the dying. I love equipment, drips, and the complexity of the patient with multi-system failure. The intellectual challenge of navigating a patient's course through the tumult is--or was--very satisfying for me; sort of a tug of war, with me pulling in one direction and god in the other. I can honestly say that in all my years of practice, I could count on the fingers of one hand with fingers to spare the number of patients I've "lost" who didn't have a doctor's order permitting it. Even with children, I could handle the concept of death. A child is a human being like other human beings afterall, and human beings die; therefore children also die. What I couldn't handle--and why I finally quit doing such intensive work--was the emotional "dying" of the family at the bedside of their loved one. When the patient died, the pain and suffering was over. For the family, it was just beginning. There was so little I could do for their anguish; no magic words that would provide real comfort. Sometimes all I could do was cry along with them.
Mr. Edward offers some real comfort to real people. Say what you will about spirits, heaven, god, etc. I figure if I can believe in the things that theoretical physicists tell us may be true of reality, which I do, than what's so difficult about god? If one were to apply Occam's Razor to both, god would win hands down! But it doesn't really matter. It's the comfort that's provided the family of the deceased that matters. Not everyone is up for this type of comfort, admittedly, and those that aren't will have to chart their own course to the shores of meaningfulness. At least for those that do believe, he provides a service. From what little I know of him, while he benefits financially from his work as does any service industry individual, he is not taking advantage of anyone. I feel he is sincere in what he undertakes, and that's what is most important to me. There are many ghosts wandering the dark corridors of my mind, but they're not the ghosts of the dead. They're those of the living, and I can hear their questions echoing in my head: "why my son," "why my wife," "what did my mother ever do to deserve this?" As a health professional, I can do little to help people who have lost a loved one; if Mr. Edward can, and the book suggests he can and does, then more power to him.
|