Editor's pick
Past Life Therapy-The State of the Art
Looking for Carroll Beckwith: The True Stories of a Detective's Search for His Past
This tale is improbable in more ways than one: Indianapolis police
homicide commander Snow offers a dryly nonplused account of his
discovery of his "past life" as 19th-century portrait painter Carroll
Beckwith. Snow participated in (and taped) a therapeutic "recovered
memory" session as a lark, and, once hypnotized, was jolted by a series
of clear images and recollections that seemed even then strangely
plausible, despite his cop's hard-nosed, empirical perspective. Later,
when he walked into a New Orleans gallery at random and confronted a
painting that had appeared to him in his vision, he determined to put
his detective's investigative skills to work and research congruencies
between his "memories" and the artist's life. Surprisingly, the
evidence that he painstakingly assembled through retrieving Beckwith's
journals and work from obscurity seemed fully to confirm that Snow's
"recollections" were authentic. Snow relates all this ruefully, hardly
eager to be perceived as "New Age." His crisp, unpretentious prose and
descriptive skill go a long way in convincing one to follow his
unorthodox journey. His researched account of Beckwith's lost life is
impressive: Snow is remarkably sensitive to aesthetic concerns and has
unearthed the compelling tale of an artist who was forced to rely on
portraiture for support, and whose fast fade seemed foreordained, even
as friends like John Singer Sargent found fame. Snow has the courage of
his convictions: though his detective wife urged him to curtail his
quest to avoid career risk, his book is provocative.
It is in this manner related to regression therapy since it comes up with matters that have come to point to the truth of the recovered memories.
ISBN-10: 1579541011








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