About This Book
A reflective allegory born from prolonged illness imagines the soul as alive and cognisant despite bodily decay, insisting that love and relationships constitute its true atmosphere. The narrative treats immortality poetically rather than doctrinally, depicting the spirit as imprisoned but intact, and rejecting views that the afterlife effaces individuality into passive piety. Reincarnation is introduced as a symbolic solution to unequal lifespans and moral development rather than a literal forecast. The tale unfolds through evocative journeys and valley scenes that explore memory, identity, spiritual progress, and the limits of perception between minds.
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