Summary
Stuart Edward White was a bestselling adventure novelist, friend of President Theodore Roosevelt, and pioneer of the American conservation movement. But the greatest frontier he ever explored was the unseen world. With his wife Betty—a gifted medium whose automatic writing and spoken messages revealed a vision of life beyond death—White chronicled some of the most compelling metaphysical accounts of the 20th century: books that captivated millions before largely fading into obscurity.
Utilizing the Whites’ own writings and previously overlooked archives, the authors describe how a skeptical outdoorsman and his clairvoyant wife became unlikely messengers for whom they called “The Invisibles”—spirit communicators who offered profound insights into the continuity of consciousness, the nature of reality, and humanity’s place in the worlds beyond this one.
Betty’s posthumous communications—authenticated by her husband and validated by great thinkers of the day, such as Carl Jung—form a testament to the possibility that love and awareness do not end with death. With candidness, depth, and a storyteller’s flair, Lucid and Pontiac present a timely revival of the Whites’ forgotten legacy.
This small but perfectly formed spiritual biography—an exploration of mediumship and life after death—invites readers to consider that the greatest journeys may begin where the visible world ends.