Books
By: Paulo Coelho
A symbolic fable about listening to inner guidance, trusting the unfolding path, and recognizing meaning as it reveals itself through experience. The Alchemist isn’t meant to be read for instruction, but for reflection — a mirror for anyone standing at the edge of change or inquiry.
By: Lois Lowry
A spare and unsettling exploration of what is lost when comfort, sameness, and control replace feeling, memory, and choice. The Giver invites reflection on perception, autonomy, and the cost of engineered harmony — asking where discernment ends and obedience begins.
By: Ayana Elizabeth Johnson
A reframing of the climate conversation away from fear and paralysis and toward imagination, agency, and collective care. Rather than asking what we must sacrifice, What If We Get It Right? invites readers to consider what becomes possible when solutions are rooted in justice, creativity, and shared responsibility
By: James Nestor
An exploration of how modern habits have reshaped the way we breathe — and how returning to more conscious, functional patterns can support physical health, nervous system regulation, and mental clarity. Drawing from science, history, and lived experiment, Breath invites attention to something both ordinary and profound.
By: Diane Wilson
A layered story of land, lineage, and remembrance, The Seed Keeper explores how ancestral knowledge is carried through seeds, stories, and bodies across generations. Moving between past and present, the novel reflects on loss, survival, and the quiet resilience required to protect what is sacred in the face of erasure.
By: Florinda Donner
An account of altered perception, dreaming, and awareness drawn from indigenous-informed lineages and lived apprenticeship. Being in Dreaming explores dreaming not as escape, but as a disciplined way of relating to reality — one that blurs the boundary between waking and non-waking states while emphasizing attention, responsibility, and energetic sobriety.
By: Laura Lynne Jackson
An exploration of how meaning, synchronicity, and subtle communication can show up in everyday life. Signs invites readers to notice patterns without forcing interpretation — offering a gentle framework for recognizing connection while staying anchored in personal discernment.
By: Dolores Cannon
The Three Waves of Volunteers and the New Earth explores the idea of a collective soul agreement unfolding during a time of planetary transition. Drawing from decades of hypnotherapy sessions, Cannon describes three “waves” of highly sensitive volunteers who often feel out of place in traditional systems, carrying a quiet sense of purpose without a defined role. Rather than emphasizing destiny or hierarchy, the book centers presence, frequency, and subtle influence—suggesting that simply being, anchoring compassion, and modeling steadiness may be the work itself. This perspective often resonates with those who have long felt different, early, or misaligned with dominant culture.
By: Allison Larkin
A tender coming-of-age story about belonging, chosen family, and the ways relationships shape who we become. The People We Keep follows a young woman as she moves through grief, music, and connection, learning that healing often happens not through fixing the past, but through being met in the present. A gentle reflection on attachment, resilience, and the quiet courage it takes to let oneself be known.
By: Matt Haig
A contemplative novel about choice, regret, and the many lives we imagine we might have lived. The Midnight Libraryexplores the space between despair and possibility, inviting reflection on how meaning is shaped less by perfect decisions than by presence, acceptance, and the willingness to remain in relationship with life as it is. A gentle inquiry into what it means to stay.