Whether you believe in psychic premonitions or not, Mysteries of the Mind and the Senses, replete with factual details of times, dates, and places, will stir the interest of even the most devout skeptic.
Follow along as details are recounted, from dreams and feelings recorded throughout England, foretelling a disaster that occurred in a small rural village in the south of Wales.
Learn of the premonition that none other than Susan B. Anthony, founder of America's Women's Suffrage movement, had that saved her from a deadly hotel fire.
Read about the startling possibilities of psychometry--the ability to hold and object and read its history.
These phenomena and others will compel you to turn the pages of The Mysteries of the Mind and The Senses.
Phyllis Raybin Emert is a published author and an editor of children's books and young adult books. Some of the published credits of Phyllis Raybin Emert include Art in Glass (Eye on Art), Attorneys General: Enforcing the Law (In the Cabinet), Strangest of Strange Unsolved Mysteries, Vol. 1 (Strangest of Strange Unsolved Mysteries).
In this book people have premonitions or feelings of things that have not happened yet. Then minutes, days, even weeks later whatever they “dreamed” about or felt suddenly happen. My favorite was about a man who thought that you can tell the history of any object just by holding it. People that had this ability were called psychics, but he preferred to call them the sensitive. One of the experiments was that he took several objects and wrapped them in brown paper, and then he placed one of these objects in a woman’s hands not letting her know what was in it. When the object was placed in her hands she had a vision of an exploding volcano and lava going into the ocean. It turned out that the object in her hands was a piece of volcanic rock from the eruption of the Kilevea Volcano in Hawaii.