Review
...a remarkably witty and entertaining. A powerful quality of love permeates the text. --
BETTER WORLD MAGAZINE, 1992 An absorbing study of man's spiritual nature --
NAPRA TRADE NEWS Dr. Peebles is one of the most well known spirits of trance channeling. He is one of the few spirits who has a known historical previous life...This book presents the dialogues of Dr. Peebles with various people and we experience his knowledge, wisdom and expression through them. --
BODHI TREE Bookstore, Spring, 1995 Mediums are always a fascination because they illuminate a part of consciousness we cannot study objectively. Without speculating on the source of Dr. Peebles' energy, the manifestation itself is entertaining, often illuminating and usually outrageous; another piece of evidence for a case which has not yet been decided definitively. --
David Viscott, M.D., from To Dance With Angels My thanks for a wonderful book...one of the most provocative new books on the subject. Although I'm a born skeptic...To Dance With Angels moved me and brought me great pleasure. [It] is a fascinating read which will give you a good deal to think and talk about, and I highly recommend it as my "Best Book" of the week. --
Pam Jekel, co-host, BEST BOOKS Arts and Entertainment Cable Television Show, Channel 12, Dayton, Maryland, aired August 16, 1990 The Pendletons make the otherworldly Dr. Peebles very real, giving a skeptic a means to accept. This powerful book, written in a conversational tone, is assessable to any reader. --
WHOLE LIFE TIMES, February, 1992 This book has set off an interesting chain of events that will undoubtedly change many of our lives forever. Some who have recently read the book admit to crying throughout the book; others cannot put it down and read its 380 plus pages in all one sitting; and others admit they had to put it down because they needed time to ponder and absorb the wisdom found within. --
CENTER FOR INTUITIVE & HEALING ARTS, Sept. 1995
Product Description
Medium Thomas Jacobson shares the wisdom of the spirit of James Martin Peebles, who lived in the nineteenth century and tells readers through Jacobson that life on Earth should be treated like an educational process. Reprint.
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