For a true beginner, I'd actually recommend 'The Three Waves of Volunteers and the New Earth' as a first read. It's more narrative and less clinical than some of her other books. The concept—that many people here now are souls who volunteered to come help Earth—is incredibly uplifting and easier to grasp initially than some of the more technical regression mechanics. It creates a framework that makes the rest of her work make more emotional sense. It was the book that hooked me because it felt hopeful and big-picture, rather than just a manual.
I got started with 'Between Death and Life' after a friend who's been into this stuff for years shoved it at me. Honestly, it was a game-changer. It's written in this super straightforward, Q&A style based on her client sessions, so it doesn't feel like you're reading a dense textbook. It lays out the whole cosmology—spirit guides, the life review, soul contracts—in a way that just clicks.
After that, I'd jump to 'The Convoluted Universe: Book One'. I know the title sounds intimidating, but it's where she really gets into the wild stuff: star seeds, different dimensions, the whole nine yards. Starting with 'Between Death and Life' gives you the foundational language so that when 'Convoluted' talks about densities or walk-ins, you're not totally lost. Those two together form a solid core before you explore her other work like 'The Custodians', which is more UFO-focused.
The seminar transcripts, like 'Jesus and the Essenes', are surprisingly beginner-friendly. They read like you're in the room, listening to a conversation unfold. You pick up her technique and the kinds of questions she asks organically. It's less about building a systematic model and more about observing a master at work. That observational learning can be a gentler entry point than tackling her synthesized conclusions head-on.
Contrary opinion here: skip the 'big' books at first. Find 'Legacy from the Stars'. It's older and shorter, a collection of cases about past lives not on Earth. It's weird, accessible in bite-sized chunks, and because each case is self-contained, you can dip in and out. It shows her method in action without the heavier philosophical structures. If you read that and still want more of the 'how-to' and the overarching model, then go for 'Between Death and Life'. Starting with the fringe cases might sound backwards, but it makes the later framework feel like an exciting explanation rather than dry theory.
2026-06-24 20:00:05
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Reincarnation - The Divine Doctor and Stay-at-home Dad
Chao Shuang Hei Pi
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As an ordinary human being on the earth, Tang Long was brought to the Cultivation World by a lost immortal, and relying on his amazing talent, he made it to one of the five emperors in that world. However, struck by Thunder of Nine Heavens, he lost his life. It was lucky for him to rebirth in the human world as an intern who was named Qin Haodong. With his excellent medical skills, he became a divine doctor of traditional Chinese medicine and a father of a baby girl, whose mother was as pretty as a fairy. The little girl even asked him to find more lovers. What a cute girl...
In my last life, my sister Serena Vega ran to Monaco the night before her wedding, and my family shoved me into her dress before dawn.
Damian Lucchese, the young Godfather of New York, had been waiting at the altar for her. The moment he lifted my veil and saw me instead, the warmth in his eyes went cold.
For five years, I was his hidden wife. The underworld knew he was married, but no one knew to whom. My parents blamed me for stealing Serena’s place and still failing to keep his heart.
Then Serena came home.
That Christmas, Damian took her and my parents to his mountain estate. When a blizzard hit, his men rushed everyone onto the helicopter.
No one remembered me.
I died in that frozen house, three months pregnant with Damian’s child.
When I opened my eyes again, Serena had just returned to New York.
This time, I would not beg for love.
Only when I truly walked away, none of them had the right to regret it.
For one year, I believed Matteo De Luca had truly fallen in love with me.
Our marriage began as an alliance, but he held me every night, kissed me before council meetings, and fastened the De Luca Donna brooch at my throat as if I already belonged beside him.
Then his first love, Vanessa Ashford, came back.
Within days, our official ceremony was postponed, her access was added to the Donna wing, and Matteo stopped wearing the family signet he once used to claim me in public.
He said it was council business.
But council business did not leave amber perfume on his skin. It did not sit beside him on a private jet to Palm Beach. And it certainly did not smile from the Donna’s chair while his friends watched me lose my place.
The final humiliation came at a private dinner, when someone asked whether I was Matteo’s wife.
He looked at me, then said calmly, “Elena and I have an arrangement.”
That night, I stopped waiting to be chosen.
Matteo could keep his first love, his title, and the home he let her enter.
I packed my passport, my Florence contract, and the prenatal report he had never seen.
Then I left New York with his child.
In her past life, Calla Greystone was the fat, awkward daughter of a disgraced Beta who sold her out for a pack alliance. Trapped in a miserable marriage to the cold and distant Alpha Lucien Thorne—who thought she was part of her father’s scheme—Calla was ignored, insulted, and cast aside. She gave birth alone, lived without love, and died in a tragic accident… or so everyone thought.
But fate gave her a do-over.
Calla wakes up on the same night her life derailed—the night she and Lucien were drugged and pushed into a mating scandal. Only this time, she’s done being a pawn. She stops her father from forcing a marriage, refuses to be Lucien’s regret, and walks away from a future she knows all too well.
Can Calla survive the game long enough to rewrite the rules?
Will Lucien finally fight for the mate he once failed?
Or will the past devour them both before the truth comes to light?
My husband was an air traffic controller. In our past lives, my daughter had a heart attack when the flight we were in faced a thunderstorm. I contacted my husband at the control tower to arrange for priority landing. At the same time, the other flight that my husband's soul mate was in crashed after being struck by lightning. My husband acted normal after that incident. However, later on my daughter's birthday, he locked my daughter and I in the house, and we were burned to death. "If you hadn't asked for priority landing, Kelly's flight would not have crashed! I don't think there is anything wrong with your daughter. You only did that out of your jealousy for Kelly, you caused the death of a few hundred innocent lives." My daughter and I did not manage to escape, we died horribly. The next time I opened my eyes, I returned to the day when my daughter was having a heart attack again. This time, my husband disconnected my call to the control tower completely. However, when he learnt that our daughter had died from a heart attack, he went crazy.
At the auction, Victor raised his paddle and won the twenty-three-carat rough pink diamond.
He waved a casual hand. "It's for Lillian."
Sitting beside him, I went still, a tremor running through me so faint no one noticed.
Only then did he seem to remember me. "Use the leftovers for a pair of earrings," he added, almost as an afterthought. "Give them to Claudia."
Later, I followed the family's orders and married him. I became the Donna of the Medici Family.
We spent a steady, loveless lifetime together.
On my deathbed, Victor held my hand and asked if I had any last wishes.
I looked at my jewelry box. The top tray was filled with pieces made from his scraps, the leftovers from every gift he'd ever given Lillian.
I drew my last breath without answering.
When I opened my eyes again, I was back at the moment the two Families were competing for the Medici Donna's seat.
In my previous life, I'd held the Smith & Wesson, fired ten shots, and hit ten bullseyes. The old Don had named me the future Donna of his Family on the spot.
This time, I let out a slow breath and pulled the trigger.
I missed on purpose.
A lot of people jump straight to 'Between Death and Life' for this, and it's a solid foundation—it breaks down the stages souls go through between lives, council meetings, the whole thing. But honestly, 'The Convoluted Universe' series gets into the really wild stuff. The first book lays groundwork, but by books four and five, you're reading about parallel lives happening simultaneously or souls incarnating in multiple dimensions at once. It's less a structured guide and more a mind-bending exploration.
If someone's coming from a more traditional past-life regression angle, 'Keepers of the Garden' is fascinating because it frames a soul's journey across lifetimes in the context of extraterrestrial origins. That one feels like a bigger-picture cosmic biography. The 'Three Waves of Volunteers' ties reincarnation directly to Earth's spiritual shift, which gives the soul journey a very urgent, modern purpose. 'Legacy from the Stars' is another deep cut, looking at soul memories from non-human existences. Cannon's work builds on itself, so starting with 'Between Death and Life' makes sense, but the later, more convoluted material is where the soul journey concept gets stretched to its limits.
I've spent a lot of time with her work, and while she wrote many books, the one I keep coming back to is 'The Three Waves of Volunteers and the New Earth.' It doesn't get recommended as often as 'Between Death and Life' for metaphysical topics, but I think it's more directly useful for understanding a healing framework. It lays out this concept of soul groups coming to help shift the planet's energy, which reframes healing as a collective, vibrational process rather than just an individual one.
That perspective completely changed how I view energy work. Her later books, like 'The Convoluted Universe' series, can feel a bit overwhelming with all the esoteric details. 'Three Waves' is more grounded in application. It gave me a model to understand why some healing modalities feel effective even when the logic is elusive—it's less about fixing a single person and more about aligning with a broader shift.
I'd pair it with 'Between Death and Life' for foundational soul concepts, but 'Three Waves' is the book that actually motivated me to explore energy healing practices.
I've read a bunch of Cannon's work, and honestly, I think people chasing the 'best' books for alien stuff often overlook her foundational trilogy. 'The Convoluted Universe: Book One' is where the wilder material really starts, but you can't skip 'The Three Waves of Volunteers and the New Earth'. It's less about little green men and more about soul origins and cosmic purpose, which ties directly into her broader ET narratives. The case studies there about starseeds and walk-ins feel like the key to her whole framework.
'Keepers of the Garden' gets cited a lot for its direct channeling about our planetary history and genetic tampering, but it's older and the pacing is slower. For someone new, I'd say start with 'The Three Waves'. It grounds the more out-there concepts in a context of spiritual transition, which makes the extraterrestrial elements feel less like sci-fi and more like... well, a potential past. After that, 'The Convoluted Universe' books become a treasure trove of specifics.