 I was recently contacted by critically acclaimed author M. J. Rose regarding her newest novel, The Reincarnationist. Rose has been interested in Eastern philosophy and especially reincarnation since her early years and has now written a book of fiction surrounding many of those ideas.
I was recently contacted by critically acclaimed author M. J. Rose regarding her newest novel, The Reincarnationist. Rose has been interested in Eastern philosophy and especially reincarnation since her early years and has now written a book of fiction surrounding many of those ideas.The Reincarnationist has received star reviews from Library Journal, Publishers Weekly, was chosen as a Booksense pick and has received rave reviews from People Magazine, The Chicago Sun Times and more. And so, without further ado, M. J. Rose introduces us to the back story of her latest book in a Saturday guest post:
The Venerable Thich Nguyen Tang said: “To Buddhism, however, death is not the end of life, it is merely the end of the body we inhabit in this life, but our spirit will still remain and seek out through the need of attachment, attachment to a new body and new life. Where they will be born is a result of the past and the accumulation of positive and negative action, and the resultant karma (cause and effect) is a result of ones past actions.”
When I was three years old, I  told my great grandfather things about his childhood in Russia that  there was simply no way I could have known. 
He was not a Buddhist but a Kabbalist  – and reincarnation is as much a part of mystic Judaism tradition  as it part of Buddhism. As he continued  to  talk to me about  these memories, my great grandfather became convinced I was a reincarnation  of someone from  his past. 
My mother – a logical and skeptical  woman – argued with him about what she called his “old fashioned”  ideas but over time and more incidents, she became curious enough to  start reading up on the subject.
And so reincarnation was an idea I grew up with. A concept that my mom and I talked about and researched together. We studied what Buddhists and Kabbalists and Hindus wrote. We read scientific articles and skeptical arguments. We debated and postulated.
If you had asked me at twenty if I believed, I would have said “I don’t not believe.” But I was fascinated. And remained fascinated.
In my early thirties I studied Zen Buddhism and learned to mediate.  It was about the same time I started writing fiction and found myself  very much wanting to write a novel about reincarnation. 
But it wasn’t until my mother  died ten years ago that I finally began to make notes for that novel…  a story about someone like her  who started out skeptical but came  to believe in reincarnation. At the time I was too close to the subject  and missed her too much to work on the project. The grief was too close  and too raw.
Then  four years ago on  the exact anniversary of my mom’s death my niece, who was almost three  years old told me about experiences I’d had with my mother… experiences  my niece couldn’t have known – moments I had never shared with anyone. 
There was no turning away anymore.  That experience convinced me it was time for me to finally explore my  ideas and questions about reincarnation through my novel.
Josh Ryder, the main character  in The Reincarnationist has my mom’s initials, her spirit and her  curiosity and like her, he’s a photographer. But there the similarities  end.
When Josh starts having flashbacks  that simply can’t be explained any other way except as possible reincarnation  memories he goes to New York to study with Dr. Malachai Samuels -- a  scientist and Reincarnationist who works with children helping them  deal with past life memories.
In the process Josh gets caught  up in the search for ancient memory tools that may or may not physically  enable people to reach back and discover who they were and who they  are. 
Thich Nguyen Tang said: “So  we can say that in Buddhism, life does not end, merely goes on in other  forms that are the result of accumulated karma. Buddhism is a belief  that emphasizes the impermanence of lives, including all those beyond  the present life.  With this in mind we should not fear death as  it will lead to rebirth.”
I think writing is a rebirth  like that. Thoughts reborn as words that in a way die for the author  once they are put to paper but are then reborn again for the reader  who picks up the book and experiences the ideas and thoughts of the  writer in his or her own personal way.
~Peace to all beings~





 
 












