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Seller's Description:
Good+ 191pp, 12mo, tight binding, clean throughout, mildly soiled and worn wraps with a small tear to the bottom of the spine. originally published in 1954.
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Seller's Description:
Good in Poor jacket. Name of the previous owner. Foreword by Sir John Anderson, Bart. Reprint, 1960. Publication of 191 pages. The dust jacket is worn. The boards are in good condition. There is light foxing on the early and last pages, little within the body of the book. The text remains bright and clear. Tightly bound and protected in cellophane. The binding is excellent. GK.
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Seller's Description:
Fine in Very Good dust jacket. Hardcover with dustjacket, book is in excellent condition, no remarkable flaws, jacket is price-clipped, mild tanning on the spine, moderate edge-wear, mainly confined to the corners, jacket remains clean and presentable and a professional (removable) mylar cover is included, occult philosophy about the hereafter.
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Seller's Description:
Very good in very good dust jacket. rare, collectible. 191 p. Audience: General/trade. This is the first in a number of books that claim to be the words of Monsignor Robert Hugh Benson, as received by Anthony Borgia. They have proved very popular, possibly because he was a prolific writer while alive, and held a senior position in the Catholic Church. This volume was first published in 1954 and achieved its eleventh reprint by 1960. While this book covers many interesting topics, the reader should not assume that because Benson was a scholarly academic of a religious bent, that he is suddenly a highly competent spirit narrator. Nevertheless I believe the book is valuable, as a typical tale of what happens to many people post death. The spirit telling the tale in this case is an ex-catholic, Monsignor Robert Hugh Benson. In spite of his previous religious background, he tells us a tale largely devoid of religious comment, save for his indignation at what he previously believed and indeed wrote as a mortal. He does not cover advanced spiritual topics such as achieving the new birth, in fact he has quite limited comment on these matters, reserving them for another book entitled "Facts." The topics include passing over, the magnificence of the spheres, how they move around, eating fruits, their cities and buildings. How buildings are constructed, hospitals and children. A number of topics are better covered here than anywhere else I have found, including the issue of garments, movement, and even boating. Yes boating. For those of us who like boating!
A very interesting read from Monsignor Robert Hugh Benson, who wrote the book Necromancers while he was still alive. After he died, he so regretted some of the false statements in the book he asked if he could contact the incarnate world (through a medium) and set things right by "writing" another book with the truths about what heaven is all about.