As contemporary metaphysical books go, this 160-page one was not a bad read. Dr. Galland comes across as an intelligent, sane man. (I mention sane because unfortunately with some metaphysical books, as well as some memoirs, one actually ends up reading about nothing but the severe psychological problems of the author.) To truly appreciate this story, however, you have to believe that not only did Dr. Galland have after-death communication with his son, but that his "brain-damaged, special-needs child" was now a wise soul, who instructs his father on the meaning of life and the nature of Heaven.
It's not that I totally disbelieve that possibility, but I still wonder, when I read books like this one, if a parent's grief is not making him or her imagine their deceased child is telling them all sorts of enlightening things from "the other side". Isn't it just as possible that all this enlightening information is coming from Dr. Galland's mind, not the mind of his 22-year-old departed son? Isn't it just as possible that all of the talk in the book about how his son's "infuriating" and "inconsiderate" behavior was actually just a wise soul testing others on Earth, were the words of a grieving father trying to make the life of his brain-damaged child more meaningful and less meaningless?
This is not to challenge Dr. Galland's belief that his son's life was meaningful, but I can't buy all the ideas he is putting forth in this book. It's too much like a New Age book where everyone is suppose to feel good about everything, even things that are not or were not good. "Good" is a very subjective word, though. Nevertheless, there is really nothing new in Already Here; nothing that hasn't been proposed before about life, death and Heaven; nothing particularly inspiring. Of course, what does not inspire one person may inspire another. This book may also help grieving parents, particularly those who have lost a mentally or physically challenged child.
(Note: I received a free copy of this book from Amazon Vine.)