Edgar Cayce: Mystery Man of Miracles
|
| List Price: | $16.95 |
| Price: | $12.71 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
25 new or used available from $8.10
Average customer review:Product Description
Public interest in Edgar Cayce is greater now, sixty-two years after his death, than when he was alive and making the incredible predictions that established him as the most documented psychic of all time. In early 1929 Cayce predicted an imminent Wall Street crash. It came the following October. Edgar Cayce's predictions reached beyond historic dates and happenings and often helped people personally by prescribing medical treatment and surgeries sometimes for people he had never met procedures which saved many lives. His gift was truly amazing! Here is the story of this remarkable man whose wonders are yet been able to be explained or duplicated.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #975320 in Books
- Published on: 2007-06-13
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 200 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Author of westerns including 'The Cheyenne Wars: The Dramatic Saga of the Greatest of all the Indian Tribes' (1964), 'Cut-Hand, the Mountain Man' (1964), and 'For a Few Dollars More' (1965). He also wrote mystery (Mansion of Evil, 1950) and science fiction (The Gods Hate Kansas, 1964), and biographies such as 'The Wickedest Man: The Extraordinary Story of the "Gentleman from Hell"' (1954) and 'Edgar Cayce: Mystery Man of Miracles' (1956). He died in 1989.
Customer Reviews
Intriguing Biography of Cayce's Early Years
I like this book because of its underlying theme: that every time Cayce concentrated on making money, he would lose his voice. You could see how his soul was in charge. I like that the author put the chronological events of Cayce's early years together with his problems of losing his ability to speak.
Like so many of us, Cayce struggled with an inner conflict of will over whether he would devote his life to fulfilling his soul purpose by giving psychic readings to help others, or would he concentrate on providing for his family? It seemed that every time Cayce would put himself in charge instead of following his soul purpose, he would lose his ability to speak.
Don't get me wrong. The message isn't that you aren't supposed to concentrate on caring for your family. In fact, in Edgar Cayce: The Sleeping Prophet, the author emphasizes that Cayce's trance source assured his family that they would never want for the necessities of life. Nonetheless, they often did not know how they would heat their house, or find food to eat. It did work out, though.
Since Edgar Cayce: Mystery Man of Miracles concentrates on Cayce's early years--his childhood and his young adult years--I wouldn't have know that he continued to have problems with losing his ability to speak into his late adult years. Gladys Davis Turner, his secretary, describes special trance sessions for Cayce in which he would heal his throat by increasing circulation to the area while under trance in her book, My Years with Edgar Cayce : The Personal Story of Gladys Davis Turner.
I find it a bit disconcerting that some of the stories in this book disagree with Cayce's first biography, There Is a River: The Story of Edgar Cayce. For example, in this book, the angel comes to him while he is asleep in his bedroom at night. In There is a River, she arrives while he is outside in his special place in the woods. Which story is the right one?
What I especially like is the author's writing style, how he starts by saying that Christian County, Kentucky, where Cayce was born, was known for producing strange animal babies, such as piglets with two tails or calves with two heads. The inference is that Cayce was a strange baby in a long list of anomalies.
For anyone who can't get enough of Cayce, this is a delightful read that takes you right into Cayce's life as he sets out to wrangle with his unusual psychic talents.
by Carol Chapman, photographer of Divine in Nature: With Quotes from Edgar Cayce and author of When We Were Gods: Insights on Atlantis, Past Lives, Angelic Beings of Light and Spiritual Awakening.




