What Karen found in Alcoholics Anonymous, and I found in the Course, was a path to God that wasnt waylaid by religious dogma.
Marianne Williamson, NYT bestselling author of A Return to Love
Caseys voice is thoughtful and accessible. Readers with a belief in the power of God will be most amenable to her recommendations for a simpler, more rewarding life.
Publishers Weekly
Karen Casey is a wise woman, writing more than twenty books based on her own experiences, including her long-time spiritual practices with the 12-steps and A Course in Miracles. Her writing and her speaking have affected millions of lives.
Jan Johnson, publisher emerita, Conari Press
Karen Casey teaches us how to row our boat (note: not other peoples boats) gently down the stream. When we row gently, we dont yell who or what must be on the bank around the bend. We peacefully accept what comes and this makes us very merry.
Hugh Prather, author of Morning Notes and The Little Book of Letting Go
You just cant go wrong with Karen Casey.
Earnie Larsen, author of Stage II Recovery: Life Beyond Addiction and From Anger to Forgiveness
Karen Casey outlines the continuing process of practicing detachment, which ultimately means dealing with our control issues and fear. Her honesty about detachment as a lifelong process brings comfort and encouragement. And by her use of many stories about how other peoplemen and women alikeare finding the peace that detachment brings and her wonderful way of illuminating what detaching is and isnt, readers will discover how to connect with their inherent powers. Thanks Karen, for writing this book and for a lifetime of dedicated service that has made this world a better place.
Melody Beattie, author of Codependent No More: How to Stop Controlling Others and Start Caring for Yourself
A remarkable book written in easy-to-understand language with great honesty.
Jerry Jampolsky, MD, founder of the International Center for Attitudinal Healing
I grew up thinking that, as an infant, I must have gotten mixed up in the hospital and sent home with the wrong family. These people could not possibly be my real parents! Eventually, I came to accept the reality of my topsy turvy homelife and that there are indeed gifts from growing up this way. I am so grateful to have read this book, which is like a silver-linings playbook for adult children. Karen Casey's appealingly honest and very wise book can be a guide to helping you discover *the good stuff.*
Becca Anderson, author of Badass Affirmations