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OverviewDo you believe in spirits? Paul Sochaczewski travels to Indonesia, Myanmar, the United Kingdom, and Switzerland to speak with mediums, shamans, and, yes, spirits of dead folks. In this innovative work of personal journalism, Sochaczewski--a self-described Agnostic Spiritualist--creates the Three Tenets of Spiritualism. He receives a personal mandate from Moses, speaks with Alfred Russel Wallace about his relationship with Charles Darwin, gets frustrated by vague messages given by Wallace's assistant, Ali, encounters a female vampire ghost who wants to follow him home (it's his own fault), converses with nature spirits, and is invited on a date with the Mermaid Queen of Java. In exploring the characteristics that give mediums their power and in examining tricks of the trade, he admits there are many things we can't explain with our science-oriented, logical, left brains. While there are few answers in this book, there are many questions and conundrums, such as: Are we more than our physical bodies? Is death the end, or merely the beginning of a new phase of existence? And, was the terrifying misandrous female vampire ghost Paul met in Borneo satisfied with the red chicken he offered her? Full Product DetailsAuthor: Paul Spencer SochaczewskiPublisher: Explorer's Eye Press Imprint: Explorer's Eye Press Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.399kg ISBN: 9782940573325ISBN 10: 2940573328 Pages: 312 Publication Date: 03 May 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsHardly worth the paper it's printed on. Real mediums would also make stunning and enigmatic predictions. Like I have done. --Nostradamus That rascal Nostradamus copied my technique, my predictions, my innovative use of enigmatic metaphors. It was me, saya, King of Kediri, who gave the world yellow dwarves, ships that navigate in the skies, and women who dress like men. Oh, by the way, this is a terrific book, less poetic than my work, and less filled with Javanese mysticism, but still of notable value. --Joyoboyo Enlightening. A noble companion volume to my own books on spiritualism. --Arthur Conan Doyle Not a single raven. Not even a man buried behind a wall. Nevertheless, one of the better books about extraordinary dead folks to come around in a while. --Edgar Allen Poe Sochaczewski has been following me for more than forty years. I finally got to speak to him, and our conversations are recorded in this fine book. But now maybe he'll leave me alone--I'm so busy--there's a pile of strange beetles to identify, papers to write, and endless toil just trying to earn a few shillings to keep the family in porridge. --Alfred Russel Wallace I predicted this book would happen. --Edgar Cayce Too bad Sochaczewski never knew my wife George; she was a much better medium than the poseurs in this book. Otherwise, a brave attempt to understand the widening gyres. --W.B. Yeats Well done, son. --The late Samuel Wachtel, Paul's father Hardly worth the paper it's printed on. Real mediums would also make stunning and enigmatic predictions. Like I have done. --Nostradamus That rascal Nostradamus copied my technique, my predictions, my innovative use of enigmatic metaphors. It was me, saya, King of Kediri, who gave the world yellow dwarves, ships that navigate in the skies, and women who dress like men. Oh, by the way, this is a terrific book, less poetic than my work, and less filled with Javanese mysticism, but still of notable value. --Joyoboyo Enlightening. A noble companion volume to my own books on spiritualism. --Arthur Conan Doyle Not a single raven. Not even a man buried behind a wall. Nevertheless, one of the better books about extraordinary dead folks to come around in a while. --Edgar Allen Poe Sochaczewski has been following me for more than forty years. I finally got to speak to him, and our conversations are recorded in this fine book. But now maybe he'll leave me alone--I'm so busy--there's a pile of strange beetles to identify, papers to write, and endless toil just trying to earn a few shillings to keep the family in porridge. --Alfred Russel Wallace I predicted this book would happen. --Edgar Cayce Well done, son. --The late Samuel Wachtel, Paul's father Author InformationPaul Spencer Sochaczewski doesn't believe in spirits, ghosts, or psychic phenomena. Nevertheless, he is convinced that there are some happenings that cannot easily be explained by our Western, Cartesian, science-oriented set of beliefs. Let's call him an Agnostic Spiritualist. By all accounts, he enjoys a good life. He might grumble about his golf swing and being overlooked by the Pulitzer Prize committee, but no one pays much attention to such petty irritations. He applauds people who respect language, who do not abuse their cellphones in public, and who teach their children not to stand on seats on buses and trains. He would like to do nasty things to businesspeople who destroy rainforests to create oil palm plantations. He's not sure to whom (or to what) he owes his good fortune. Perhaps the answer will become clear one day. Or maybe he'll find out in the next life. Try to contact him. But for the moment, write to Paul at: www.sochaczewski.com Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |