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Beyond the Horizon : Being new evidence from 'the other side of life'

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A sincere and honest account of how the author became the recipient of messages by automatic writing, apparently from a recently deceased friend.

She tells of her bewilderment at this completely puzzling and unsought phenomena, and after much hesitation her final acceptance of the experience.

A reluctant medium, Grace Rosher was dedicated in her attempts to evaluate as objectively as she could the genuineness of the communications she has received.

Including the evidence of a graphologist who pronounced the written scripts free of forgery and conscious manipulation, this is an unusually well documented case. "Pioneering is uncomfortable - especially so when it is thrust upon a reluctant performer as a duty.

I know Grace Rosher. ... I know her disinclination to be caught-up in an activity so foreign to what she deemed to be inappropriate to herself.

She had, and still has, a 'constitutional' resistance to the exploitation - or even the exploration - of life beyond death.

Grace Rosher is no scientist: she has no curiosity of that kind.

Her religious faith made psychical experience unnecessary - indeed, repugnant, because it was 'against the rules'.

Circumstances have driven her to become a reflective and cautious spiritist." From the Foreword by Sir Victor Goddard, K.C.B., C.B.E., M.A.

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Product Details
James Clarke & Co Ltd
022767412X / 9780227674123
Hardback
133.93
26/11/1987
United Kingdom
164 pages
134 x 204 mm, 240 grams
Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More