Destiny of Souls

By Michael Newton

Destiny of Souls - Michael Newton
  • Release Date: 2010-09-08
  • Genre: Spirituality
Score: 4.5
4.5
From 69 Ratings

Description

"Journey of Souls and Destiny of Souls are two of the most fascinating books I have ever read."—Academy Award-Winning Actress and Author Shirley MacLaine
A pioneer in uncovering the secrets of life, internationally recognized spiritual hypnotherapist Dr. Michael Newton takes you once again into the heart of the spirit world. His groundbreaking research was first published in the bestselling Journey of Souls, the definitive study on the afterlife. Now, in Destiny of Souls, the saga continues with 70 case histories of real people who were regressed into their lives between lives. Dr. Newton answers the requests of the thousands of readers of the first book who wanted more details about various aspects of life on the other side. Destiny of Souls is also designed for the enjoyment of first-time readers who haven't read Journey of Souls.
Explore the meaning behind your own spiritual memories as you read the stories of people in deep hypnosis, and learn fascinating details about: Our purpose on Earth Soul mates and spirit guides Spiritual settings and where souls go after death Soul travel between lives Ways spirits connect with and comfort the living The soul-brain connection Why we choose certain bodies

Reviews

  • Superb!

    5
    By CindyCharlie
    The best of the best in spiritual literature. The new ager’s guiding light. I’ve read and reread more times than I can count, and always get more insight and understanding out of it.
  • Destiny of Souls

    5
    By Jeauxdi
    I just finished Destiny of Souls, after being glued to it for the last couple weeks, reading in the bits and pieces of quiet time I can wrangle. I never completely released my skepticism, primarily because it was so believable. If in fact this is fiction poised as non-fiction, then, bravo, you kept your audience and there were no holes in the story. This is not the first book I have read on lives between lives, going back to Dr. Moody or even Seth (channeled through Jane Roberts) back in the '70s, but it is the first I recall that involved this style of research with hypnotism. The last chapter was a terrific disappointment, though hardly a detractor for the rest of the book. The author took the opportunity here to express a sort of run on monologue of his various personal philosophies on relationships, human nature, drug use, religion (and so on, i think you will see my point) that have grown from his research. He certainly has a right to his opinion and this would be a good place except it seemed he hadn't been paying attention to the information he'd collected in his book. I don't know what he was thinking. Otherwise, loved the book.