From pain and loss to victory and elation, this true life story ignites a passion and love for humanity and our ability to change our world for the better, starting with ourselves. Drawing from personal traumas, struggles and heart break, communications with Spirits and tales of ancestry, this story carries us on an emotional journey. It encourages and inspires us to look deeper to recognize our true nature, purpose and find meaning and understanding in our day to day lives. Zealously studying spirituality since seventeen and being aware of Spirits from a much younger age has taught many lessons. After over 20 years of studies what she has deeply learned and passionately shares is that we are all gifted with a purpose. Finding this purpose is the key to our healing, fulfillment and abundance and our future harmony as the human race. @LoveistheLawALC Review by Dr.Louie Martinie Love is the Law Right now I’m sitting in Urgent Care with my wife, Mishlen Linden. I was working on nine conjure bottles for a rite tonight in the French Quarter and before that I was going to meet someone at the New Orleans Voodoo Spiritual Temple. All of that was dropped, my wife was ill. This is a good reminder of the importance of family. Love is the Law is also such a reminder. The intersection of family, ancestors and spirituality is very real and very important. In the waiting room there is a big photo of Dr. John by the admitting door. The caption reads, “The Doctor will see you now.” The spirits and the ancestors are always watching closely as we care for family. Family need not be a blood or biological relation. I remember the Priestess and author Luisha Teish saying that anyone who has a profound influence on us is family. The importance of caring about and for The Human Family, all of us together, is emphasized by Ms. Campbell throughout the book. This leads directly to an inclusion of the environment in our ever expanding zone of care. This book is extremely well written.The urgency of the prose sweeps the reader into the world of the author. The text seems to read itself. It takes on a life of its own and invites the reader to sit for a time and be a part of Ms. Campbell’s world. The experience is well worth the time. Love is the Law offers a very personal proof that “Angels, Saints, Buddhas, Deities of sorts are more than statues and symbols, they are powerful, helpful, healing, able beings.” Ms. Campbell is not alone, not without inspiration and guidance in the events chronicled. Divinity and life, ritual and the events that make up our daily lives seamlessly join in the text. The text is peppered with pith teachings which make the reader stop and give mind. “It’s easy to pray. Anyone can pray for anything. What’s not easy is listening for the answer.” So very true and so often forgotten in the rush and noise of life. It is much easier to actively pray for a specific event or thing, than to stop and listen for an answer with an open and accepting heart. The following from the book is a beautiful description of an ancestor shrine in both form and “My great grama in heaven loves him, though she died long before he could meet her. I keep her white silk scarf on my Ancestor shrine with a picture of her smiling. Most days when I walk by the shrine I can feel her smiling at me. Some days she’s more reprimanding. She sympathizes with my husband when I am grouchy or stubborn.” There is much to learn here. The esoteric and the exoteric merge in perfect harmony. The humanistic psychologist Carl R. Rogers is quoted as saying, “What is most personal is most universal.