I know you’re not supposed to judge a book by it’s cover, but when I first looked at Changing Planes, I was totally intrigued. The midnight blue of the sky and the water are mirror images of each other and it makes you think of when you have two mirrors and reflect them back to each other so that you can see infinity in them. This book was like that. It gave me a glimpse of infinity, something I never believed possible.
I was very thankful that when the book came from Amazon, that it was a little book, a novella, if you will, because frankly, I just don’t have the time to read 1000 page novels. I love them, but I get lost after the first few pages. Not so with Changing Planes. When I opened it up and started reading, I couldn’t put it down.
Though it’s my job to deal in words, I can’t describe this book well enough to do it justice. It’s better if you just read it yourself. I highly recommend that you do so. It’s not expensive and it’s the kind of book that you want to keep around, just to be able to give it to a friend. When I read it, it was like I was reading my own life, I identified with the main character that much.
Everybody should read this book, especially women. And if you can get through it without crying, then your heart is more than hardened, it has turned to stone. Maybe this book is what you need to read. Maybe you experienced something similar to what it’s main character, Madison Reeves experienced. Her heart opens wide enough for us to see inside.
Changing Planes takes us into the world of Madison Reeves, a young and ambitious VP of an upper scale department store, about to embark on a Caribbean vacation and a whole new kind of journey.
When Madison reaches the airport terminal, it is here that she discovers that things are a little off, not quite right. She receives insight into the lives of her fellow travelers, wishing all the time that she didn’t — but she ignores these glimpses until she gets on board. After taking off, things heat up a bit until she realizes things have indeed gone awry in ways she simply doesn’t understand.
Madison can no longer deny that she left the ordinary world far behind as begins to see and hear things which her fellow travel companions don’t even notice.
When she disembarks her plane in a airport terminal hung suspended between the worlds of the living and the dead, Madison realizes she isn’t in “this” world any longer. This is confirmed when her long deceased grandfather meets her at her gate.
Madison is on a journey that most souls don’t get to remember or tell as she has found herself in the world between worlds — that place between the living and the dead.
As you follow along with Madison, you see yourself in her shoes, and experience what she experiences. And when you reach the end, you are jarred clear out of your senses. If you read this book and do not realize how our journey in this life is interwoven with the lives of those we love and touch and that small changes we make affect those around us — then you must be asleep at the wheel.
When I looked into the pages of Changing Planes, it was like looking into the mirror of my own soul and finding love and forgiveness there. That alone was worth the read.
But there’s much more to the book than that. Laurie J. Brenner is a true storyteller of old, taking you on a journey right out of this world, and bringing you back safely home, changed in the process.
When I put the book down, I did not want it to end. Laurie Brenner is an authentic storyteller, a bard of old, who shares her story from the heart — don’t be fooled by its size, this little gem packs its weight in spiritual gold.
Read the first three chapters for free of this engaging metaphysical fiction. Visit www.ChangingPlanes.net now! Written by Jenny Long
categories: ghost story,award winning fiction,metaphysical fiction,new age fiction,quantum fiction,visionary fiction