Listening to the chatter of her six-year-old daughter, Cammi, Connie Cantland begins to wonder if Cammi's imaginary friend could be more than just imaginary. Connie knows her friend and coworker, Dani, believes in the survival of souls after the death of bodies, and the reincarnation of souls, so she shares her concerns with Dani about Cammi's supposed friend. Dani introduces Connie to Dacque LaRose: a friend and mentor on souls and reincarnation. Connie and Dacque's conversations propel Connie and her husband Carson into an educational journey into reincarnation of souls, soul groups, past life regression sessions, spirit guides, and conversations with souls, of which Connie and Carson previously had absolutely no knowledge of.
Doug Simpson is a retired high school teacher who has turned his talents to writing. He has nine published books, two non-fiction and seven fiction. The two non-fictions are uniquely historical and are titled, We Lived in Atlantis and The Soul of Jesus. His most recent fictional presentation is narrated by John, as he shares his life story discovering his spirit guide, invisible but not imaginary playmates, visits with his deceased grandfather in Heaven, earthbound spirits, soul groups and the reason why souls need to reincarnate over and over. The Deja Vu House is the story of a young woman and her fiance discovering an older house they wish to purchase but before the young lady even enters the house, she knows that she has lived there before. The Dacque Chronicles includes five books outlining how Dacque discovers his past lives and introduces others to the ease with which they can discover their past lives as well. Doug's magazine and website articles have been published in Australia, Canada, France, India, Mexico, Russia, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and the United States. His articles can be accessed through his website at http://dougsimpsonauthor.com/.
This is a story of life now and those that came before. Readers get to follow along mesmerized by the subject of reincarnation told by those who have lived through a retelling of those past lives. It begins when a mother is worried whether her child's invisible friend could really be a spirit. The author has several amazing books on this subject and this newest one is a great and fascinating addition.
Pros: reincarnation, as a topic, is fascinating in any form it seems. More so in this book: I never would have thought about the plot that Simpson did in relation to spirits who haven't reincarnated yet. I adored the relationships between all the characters and the complexity of this topic being explained for anyone to understand it.
Cons: my only complaint is the repetitiveness when it comes to conversation recalls. I read the same scene two or three times from when it was originally visited. I understand this is a very short story, so extra words were needed. I ended up skimming over those parts..
Conclusion : I felt this was worth the read regardless. It reignited my interest in reincarnation, as well as gave me new ideas to think upon. If you're also interested in this topic, this book does very well in presenting it in an easy-to-understand manner!