Review of All You Need Is Love by Jewelle St. James

Posted by Jessica Jewett No Comments »

Last night I finished reading All You Need Is Love by Jewelle St. James on Kindle, which is a book recounting the journey through the author’s shared with the soul known today as John Lennon. She was thrown into profound grief upon Lennon’s murder in 1980 despite not being a fan of his music and that began the slow discovery over two decades that she once knew him in the 1600s. Without giving everything away (because I want you to read it), St. James discovered that her past life was Katherine James who was born in 1666 and had a romance with a young man named John Baron who we know now as John Lennon. The romance ended in tragedy, bringing a repetitive pattern in all of her subsequent lives of trying to mourn what she was denied and understanding the nature of life and the universe. Despite the terrible difficulty of identifying people from that long ago, St. James was able to go to the sleepy English village over several visits and found documented proof that these people existed.

The book reads like a real-life mystery, leaving the reader wondering what happens next through the many twists and turns that go along with the past life discovery process. The Kindle edition has a few typographical errors but nothing to detract from the readability of the book. St. James’ narrative voice is concise, readable, and feels like listening to a story over coffee in her kitchen. Even if you are not a believer in her story, it is still an important journey of self-discovery and finding peace that strikes at the root of any spiritual exploration. The best of books require you to think about where you have been, where you’re going, and how you can change the world in your own way. In this way, St. James succeeds where many authors in this genre fall short.

I first heard about this book when a friend of mine sent me an email of an article from a Beatles magazine talking about the numerous mediums who claim to have communication with the spirit of John Lennon. At the end of the article was a list of books on that subject, including All You Need Is Love, and I admittedly found it a bit dubious. A lot of people claim to have shared past lives with celebrities or even claim to be reincarnations of dead celebrities as well. I put the article away for months until St. James herself contacted me recently because of my reincarnation website and I decided it was time to give her story a shot. After all, my own past life book, Unveiled: Fanny Chamberlain Reincarnated, strikes many people as dubious too but I would want them to give me a chance, so I gave St. James a chance in return. Needless to say, I finished the book in two days.

When people write books of this nature, it’s impossible to say with absolute certainty that everything they wrote is the truth. These things are virtually impossible to prove without a shadow of a doubt but I found the emotional aspects of her story to ring true with my own experiences. People telling the truth about these cases will not go out seeking past lives until a catastrophic event occurs to inspire the search. For me, it was nightmares of Civil War hospitals as a child. For St. James, it was John Lennon’s murder. Additionally, people who are having genuine past life experiences will not feel a sense of peace once the mystery is solved as one might think. It leaves questions open, pushes you further into uncovering cycles that need to be broken, and requires you to take stock of everything in your present life. It’s never as simple as, “I was X in a past life. I lived in Y and Z happened. Anyway….” It doesn’t work like that and people who write with unflinching honesty about how difficult it is to apply old lessons to the present strike me as truthful. For those reasons and more, I find Jewelle St. James to be truthful.

Buy All You Need Is Love on Amazon.

Paperback: http://www.amazon.com/dp/0973275227

Kindle: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B005BU9V2C

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Reader Submitted Civil War Ghost Stories

Posted by Jessica Jewett 4 Comments »

Not long ago, I asked my readers if they had ever had ghostly encounters on battlefields. These were the responses that came to my email. Have you ever had a paranormal experience? Contact me to be featured in a future blog. Happy Halloween!

From Kathy Pence:

Cold Harbor Battlefield on Route 156, Hanover County, VA — I had a friend down from CT. I was showing him the historical sites around Richmond. I happened to bring my tape recorder with me. At Cold Harbor, we left the tape recorder running and walked away from it. My CT friend got the strangest feeling of deja vu. He knew exactly what had happened there without reading the markers. He had a strong feeling he was actually there. He pointed out the very few trees that were 140 years old or more. He knows nothing about how to tell how old a tree is. When we picked up the tape recorder and got back in the car, we rewound the tape and pressed play. There was shouting, cannon fire, gun fire and screams on the tape. It gave us both goose bumps! I took photographs over there not too long ago. Appearing on the photograph was an officer on horseback. That battlefield is very active, especially on the anniversary of the battle.

Gettysburg — We used to be with a living history group. One year we were camped at Boyd’s Bear in Gettysburg. The first night was extraordinary. In the gathering mist, we could see campfires of the past out in the field there. When we walked over toward one of them, there was distinctive cold air, even though it was July. We could also smell blood and the unmistakeable odor of gangrene. The port-a-johns were up the hill. One member left to go. Directly behind her was the shadow of a frontiersman carrying a long rifle….obviously not Civil War era, but much earlier. Everyone in the group saw or felt something that night. It was very memorable.I normally can’t see these folks because I’m right brained or left brained – can’t ever remember which – but I sure saw and smelled the happenings that night! Everyone did. If you follow the route of Pickett’s charge on the actual battlefield, bu the time you reach the stone wall, you are a mess…tears, crying and barely able to move after traveling the 1/4 mile across the field.

From Jenny Tubb:

I visited Gettysburg in 2007 with my mother. Although I spent every night out on the battlefield with my camera until it closed, talking gently to the spirits and urging them to use my energy and let me take pics, I got nothing on camera. About the second day we were there, though, my mother was driving our rental car to Spanger’s Springs in the afternoon; I had my iPod on and was looking out the window in a very relaxed state.

As we drove, I caught a quick glimpse of a man standing among the foliage close to our destination. My first thought? Hiker! But then I got suspicious as I realized that the figure had no legs!! He had been wearing what looked like a cape or coat draped over his shoulders and had a hat that looked like a kepi! There were no other cars around, parked for hikers or otherwise driving around. I turned and asked my mother if she saw that man. Of course she had seen nothing.

The fact that it looked like he had no legs but was apparently floating off the ground really makes me think I saw the spirit of what I feel was a Union soldier that day.

We did have an incident with the ghost of little Jeremy at the Farnsworth House though; he put our toilet seat up in the middle of the night and my mother nearly fell into the toilet at like 1 am (that kind of made a believer out of her!) and woke me up to ask if I’d lifted the seat, which I had not.

From Jeff Wallnofer:

The night before Halloween my friends and I were doing a living history at Point Lookout state park, MD. We were given permission to camp overnight in the actual area of the prison camp yard. We were the only three reenactors who actually slept there, everyone else either stayed in a hotel or stayed in the modern camps. During the night we heard the clanking of canteens, like a soldier walking picket, back and forth and it was above our heads. We later found out that the fence line for the camp was directly next to were we slept and they had a raised catwalk that the guards stood on. We also had a small fire to keep warm and during the night I was awaken to a very strong southern accent saying “hey boy, put another log on the fire”. I didn’t see any ghost just felt a tug on my blanket and heard the voice. My friend also heard the same thing. The last thing I saw there, and perhaps the creepiest was a white specter dart through the woods about fifty yards from our area. I saw several small floating lights around this specter and I could tell she had a very angry face. I later found out from the park ranger that during the war it is believed that a nurse was raped or raped and killed in the hospital and the hospital was very close to where I saw the ghost. Well, that’s about all that happened there. I’ve seen other things during other stays at battlefields.

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Can you hear me now?

Posted by Jessica Jewett 1 Comment »

Do not adjust your computers! This is just a test to see if my new plugin to automatically post new blogs on Facebook and Twitter works. Work work work wooooork!

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