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Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Would you like to know the Afterlife? Read This One! Review: I feel this books gives a true glimpse of what indeed awaits in the afterlife. It is by the work of Susy Smith who had done the action of "automatic writing" (having your hand guided by a spirit) at this time with the soul of the previously famous, while alive, psychologist William James. He first approached her merely with the name James due to Susy's beginning aprehension of skepticism, therefore if revealed any sooner his true identity would have been denied by her, one of many clues that she did not merely fabricate this. You can best evaluate her genuiness by reading her "Confessions of a Psychic" (her biography) as well, for how true her experiences were.This book gives information such as that when you die you well not be instantly teleported to a heaven, hell or state of sleep necessarily but rather imstead you will still be who you are except now you will have alot more territory to cover. If you are a good and learned soul you will probably reach greater heights. If you are a bad and fixed soul on one of several addictions you may very well be still fixated on the earth But eventually all souls will be assisted to the outer limits where beautiful acts and occurances take place...Lets leave the rest to your own discovery. Read it!
Rating: ![3 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-3-0.gif) Summary: Interestingly, a real page turner with near possibility. Review: The dealing of and with spiritual scribing which was unlike a mere Ouiji-board experience. Suzy Smith pulls her readers into a plausible explanation of William James' afterlife imparte. Ms. Smith teaches Mormon-like dogma disguised as James' musings as viewed from his eternal realm, with Ms. Smith unwittingly being chosen as his only scribe. The scribe, (Ms. Smith), attempts to pass off her inscriptions as William James' style and as she knows nothing about William James, is not highly educated and just a housewife, how could she possibly pull off such a grand hoax? This sounds somewhat reminensent of Joseph Smith's humble station and his scribing for the angel Moroni in The Book of Mormon. (Possibly a curse for those named Smith.) Although the story is a bit far flung, it has a capturing quality that is refreshing to read as a fictional work.
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