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HEALING

A CONVERSATION

An overflowing cornucopia of paranormal claims, with a very real-world aim: healing oneself.

A debut book offers a spiritualist’s guide to dealing with chronic illness.

Goggio introduces readers to a floridly imaginative domain that will be familiar in its broad outlines to fans of New-Age and paranormal writing. It’s a realm in which the spirit world interacts with the physical world constantly and everywhere, in which few things are what they seem to be, and in which there’s an unseen governing reality beyond the observable things all around. As the author describes it, this is a kingdom full of magic: chakras, past lives, auras, psychokinesis, precognition, psychic healing, out-of-body travel, etc. Goggio experiences all of it with the help of her “Guidance,” a spirit named Jonathan, the spiritual son of the Victorian spiritualist friend of Arthur Conan Doyle, Samuel Llewelyn. Much of the book takes the form of extended dialogues between Goggio and Jonathan on a variety of topics, and each chapter ends with a series of questions designed to allow readers to focus on their own supernatural experiences. The book professes to be broadly based (“I do not follow any religious doctrine,” Goggio writes. “No affiliation is required”), but Earth’s 1 billion polytheists will find one God (and the Lord’s Prayer) being referenced in these pages, and of course atheists will find themselves excluded. “We are more than flesh and blood,” Goggio asserts. But the “research” and “data” alluded to throughout the book—material that approvingly includes controversial “psychics” like Uri Geller—undercut that certainty. While the prose remains unfailingly readable and involving, the work’s main strength for the general reader is its warm, encouraging viewpoint on coping with chronic illness and the inner isolation it can cause. “When we are ill, it is hard to feel loving,” the author writes. “All of our energy is going to our insides, marching invaders to their deaths or phantom invaders to their deaths as well, in an all-out war of our own body’s tissues.” This kind of insight should appeal to readers regardless of their stance on testable science or reliable modern medicine.

An overflowing cornucopia of paranormal claims, with a very real-world aim: healing oneself.

Pub Date: Sept. 30, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-5043-6525-3

Page Count: 422

Publisher: BalboaPress

Review Posted Online: Feb. 1, 2017

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WHAT I KNOW FOR SURE

Honest messages from one of America's best known women.

A compilation of advice from the Queen of All Media.

After writing a column for 14 years titled “What I Know For Sure” for O, The Oprah Winfrey Magazine, Winfrey brings together the highlights into one gift-ready collection. Grouped into themes like Joy, Resilience, Connection, Gratitude, Possibility, Awe, Clarity and Power, each short essay is the distilled thought of a woman who has taken the time to contemplate her life’s journey thus far. Whether she is discussing traveling across the country with her good friend, Gayle, the life she shares with her dogs or building a fire in the fireplace, Winfrey takes each moment and finds the good in it, takes pride in having lived it and embraces the message she’s received from that particular time. Through her actions and her words, she shows readers how she's turned potentially negative moments into life-enhancing experiences, how she's found bliss in simple pleasures like a perfectly ripe peach, and how she's overcome social anxiety to become part of a bigger community. She discusses the yo-yo dieting, exercise and calorie counting she endured for almost two decades as she tried to modify her physical body into something it was not meant to be, and how one day she decided she needed to be grateful for each and every body part: "This is the body you've been given—love what you've got." Since all of the sections are brief and many of the essays are only a couple paragraphs long—and many members of the target audience will have already read them in the magazine—they are best digested in short segments in order to absorb Winfrey's positive and joyful but repetitive message. The book also features a new introduction by the author.

Honest messages from one of America's best known women.

Pub Date: Sept. 2, 2014

ISBN: 978-1250054050

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Flatiron View Books

Review Posted Online: Aug. 22, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2014

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  • New York Times Bestseller


  • IndieBound Bestseller


  • Rolling Stone & Kirkus' Best Music Books of 2020

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OPEN BOOK

An eye-opening glimpse into the attempted self-unmaking of one of Hollywood’s most recognizable talents.

Awards & Accolades

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  • New York Times Bestseller


  • IndieBound Bestseller


  • Rolling Stone & Kirkus' Best Music Books of 2020

The debut memoir from the pop and fashion star.

Early on, Simpson describes the book she didn’t write: “a motivational manual telling you how to live your best life.” Though having committed to the lucrative deal years before, she “walked away,” fearing any sort of self-help advice she might give would be hypocritical. Outwardly, Simpson was at the peak of her success, with her fashion line generating “one billion dollars in annual sales.” However, anxiety was getting the better of her, and she admits she’d become a “feelings addict,” just needing “enough noise to distract me from the pain I’d been avoiding since childhood. The demons of traumatic abuse that refused to let me sleep at night—Tylenol PM at age twelve, red wine and Ambien as a grown, scared woman. Those same demons who perched on my shoulder, and when they saw a man as dark as them, leaned in to my ear to whisper, ‘Just give him your light. See if it saves him…’ ” On Halloween 2017, Simpson hit rock bottom, and, with the intervention of her devoted friends and husband, began to address her addictions and underlying fears. In this readable but overlong narrative, the author traces her childhood as a Baptist preacher’s daughter moving 18 times before she “hit fifth grade,” and follows her remarkable rise to fame as a singer. She reveals the psychological trauma resulting from years of sexual abuse by a family friend, experiences that drew her repeatedly into bad relationships with men, most publicly with ex-husband Nick Lachey. Admitting that she was attracted to the validating power of an audience, Simpson analyzes how her failings and triumphs have enabled her to take control of her life, even as she was hounded by the press and various music and movie executives about her weight. Simpson’s memoir contains plenty of personal and professional moments for fans to savor. One of Kirkus and Rolling Stone’s Best Music Books of 2020.

An eye-opening glimpse into the attempted self-unmaking of one of Hollywood’s most recognizable talents.

Pub Date: Feb. 4, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-06-289996-5

Page Count: 416

Publisher: Dey Street/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Feb. 15, 2020

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