24-02-2016, 02:53 PM
“The Afterlife of Billy Fingers is an extraordinary example of extended after-death communication. It’s one of the most powerful, liberating, and healing books on ‘life after death’ I’ve ever read. In fact, you may have a spiritual experience while reading it that will transform your beliefs about life, death, and the afterlife. I cannot recommend it highly enough to everyone who is grieving the death of a child, spouse, parent, or any other loved one.”
—Bill Guggenheim, co-author of Hello from Heaven!
“Having read The Afterlife of Billy Fingers, this world appears more deeply drenched in the sacred, and death feels like an adventure to look forward to. In this quirky, luminous account of the conversation between an introspective artistic woman and her dead bad-boy brother, Annie Kagan and Billy Fingers manage to collaborate on a work of transcendent wisdom, irreverent humor and sublime beauty.”
—Mirabai Starr, author of The Interior Castle and Dark Night of the Soul “The Afterlife of Billy Fingers by Annie Kagan is a wholly believable story that never loses its grounding in the daily life we all know. The voices of the narrator and her deceased brother never strike a false note. This is not a story that asks you to believe anything, but simply to listen with an open mind and heart. I think you will find yourself transfixed.” —Rev. Susan Varon, ordained interfaith minister
“The Afterlife of Billy Fingers is one of the best books I’ve read on the subject of life after death. So much of what the author describes jives with my experiences of both being with dying people at the moment of their deaths and in two long, extended near death experiences I’ve had myself. The book strikes chords of truth again and again and again. The excellent writing and the story itself hold the reader’s attention beautifully. Skeptics will keep reading to ‘find out what happens next.’ And whether you’re a skeptic or a true believer, the book will powerfully engage you. Part of the book’s premise is Annie’s questioning whether her communication with Billy is real or her own craziness, and that mystery keeps us reading and seeking answers. We want to find out for ourselves what the source of this communication really is. Along the way, what Billy tells Annie is inspiring, enlightening, and insightful. The book works. It’s a good read with an appealing and controversial message." —Hal Zina Bennett, author of more than 30 books including Write from the Heart and The Lens of Perception