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New York Times Best Selling Author Review
by Ellen Tanner Marsh
What is it like to be a
clairvoyant? How does it feel to communicate with the spirit world as
clearly as someone else would speak with a fellow human being? For
Jeanne Marie Antoinette, the answers are perhaps best described in the
subtitle of her astonishing biography, When Angels Die, in which
she defines her skills as “The haunting memoir of a clairvoyant blessed
and cursed with the ability to ‘see’ through the eyes of missing and
murdered children.”
Indeed, Antoinette has made
aiding police and distraught parents searching for missing or abducted
children her life’s work. Her calling hasn’t been easy; although she
believes her clairvoyance to be a gift, she describes it as a “not so
welcomed dark gift” that has left her throughout life struggling to
remain grounded between two worlds, the physical and the spiritual. As a
single mother, Antoinette supported her two children by working at local
psychic fairs while staunchly refusing to take money from the missing
children cases that arrived with heartbreaking frequency at her door.
Although Antoinette provides
readers with riveting, behind the scenes accounts of some
extraordinary—and high profile— police work, When Angels Die is
also a fascinating look at obscure Cuban and Afro-Cuban religions and
the author’s personal journey back to her roots. Patron saints, guardian
spirits and ancient ceremonies are woven throughout this spiritual
journey, and a helpful glossary at the end of the book provides a wealth
of information on Santerian, Yoruban and Cuban rituals as well as the
Yoruban language.
A prolific author of books
and screenplays, Jeanne Marie Antoinette writes with conviction and a
deft sense of style. Skeptics who approach her work will find a
refreshing lack of proselytizing; indeed, When Angels Die is
ultimately a remarkable story about a woman born with a “not so welcomed
gift” who made the most of it and, in doing so, made a heroic difference
in many people’s lives.

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