Clairvoyance, Gift Or Curse? You Decide After Reading SEERS: Ten Tales Of Clairvoyance

I was afforded the unique opportunity to read a handful of eBooks written and compiled by Rayne Hall. Rayne Hall offered some of the books in the collection to me for no cost, in exchange for an honest review.  All of the books I chose to read are from the  "Ten Tales" anthology series. This next one I would like to share with you is was SEERS: Ten Tales Of Clairvoyance. This is the one book that I could not choose any favorites-I enjoyed each and every story.



The question that you are presented with is debatable to say the least. Is clairvoyance a gift or a curse? As with most things in life there is always a fair argument for both sides. This book of short stories will give you just that.

Imagine getting a glimpse of what the future holds, and ask yourself how you would deal with the burden of this foresight?

Is it right to interfere with the proposed future? Is it your obligation to avert the bad, or will your meddling make matters worse? Is it even possible to change the future?

What if those with the power to prevent a disaster disdain your warnings? What if you see what will happen, but have no idea when it will come to pass? Is your vision to be trusted? What if your interpretation of what you see is wrong?

In this book, ten authors share their visions of what it means to be clairvoyant, each with their individual way of telling a story and their own writing style. They seek to entertain you and at the same time to make you think.

Some yarns take place in the distant past, some in fantasy lands, and others in our familiar modern world.

Each seer in this book is different. They interpret dreams, read the tarot, consult the stars and gaze into the crystal ball, or simply receive visions in their mind. Some are professional future-gazers, others dabble or are even caught unawares. Some welcome the experience, some seek it, and others try to close that channel of their mind. 
Enjoy the ten glimpses into seersʼ minds. 


But beware: the visions may be disturbing.

Beware Of Tuesdays by Frederick Langridge--Would the railway ghost still show herself? Was she really even a ghost at all?

A Good Trade by Tracie McBride--Nadia does not say exactly when her prophecy will be fulfilled.

The Vision by April Grey--Cherie foresees her future husband – a monster.

The Tale Of The Aggrieved Astrologer by Jack Nicholls--Ho Bian can ride the winds, speak to fishes, and read the stars.

Dance With The Devil by Carole Ann Moleti--Taina won’t rest until she finds out who murdered her family

The Watcher by Jeff Hargett--“I don’t frighten for fun. What I see for you is bad. Very bad.”

Senstory by Mohanalakshmi Rajakumar--What courses in the girlʼs veins – death or hope?

Ezra's Prophecy by Deborah Walker--The old hermit writes down what she hears – then casts the prophecy into the fire

I Could Have Heard You From Across The Street by Douglas Kolacki--Does Janie know when the Rapture will happen?

Prophetess by Rayne Hall--I am cursed to see the future, always to speak the truth, and never to be believed.

I would recommend this book for almost anyone, especially for someone that likes to read a quick story without having hundreds of pages to go through or many characters to wait to have be developed. Each of the short stories can take anywhere from five to twenty minutes to read, easily this can be finished in one night. You can easily check it out for purchase of only 99¢ by heading over to Amazon.

Many of the stories in this book have been previously published in magazines, ezines, anthologies and collections. The authors stem from all over the world and use different versions of the English language with variations in word choices, spellings, grammar and punctuation.

This story collection is part of the 'Ten Tales' series of anthologies, edited by Rayne Hall.


I received one or more of the products mentioned above for free using Tomoson.com. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will be good for my readers.
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