The Books
The written works of The Ghosts Movement are companions to walk beside, not to complete. Each book lives as a quiet presence, carrying memory and recognition through the small moments of daily life. They are not designed to teach, measure, or transform, but to accompany the reader in returning to what still matters. Together, they form a conversation between time, body, and breath.
At the still centre is The Ghosts Manifesto, the grounding text that gives language to presence and memory in everyday form. It is not a guide or philosophy to follow, but a companion for recognising what lingers quietly beneath the noise of living. The book speaks of memory as something alive, not as a record to recall but as a presence that continues to move through us. It recognises sacredness in the everyday, in kitchens and corridors, in gestures and pauses, in the ordinary rhythm of being alive.
Here, stillness is not required. Presence is valid in noise, in confusion, and in all that is unresolved. The Manifesto invites the reader to notice the places where memory rests quietly in the body, in breath, in repetition, and in care. It reminds us that nothing essential has been lost, only forgotten for a time.
From this centre, the Ghosts Trilogy unfolds as a slow movement through time.
Ghosts of Deep Time listens to what the ground remembers. It turns to land, stone, and body as living archives, places where the past hums quietly beneath the surface. This is not a history of events but a felt encounter with the endurance of matter. Beneath dust, within walls, or through the still weight of a stone, there is something that continues to breathe. The book invites a different kind of listening, one that is not about learning but about sensing the quiet pulse of what still remains. In Deep Time, memory is geological and ancestral. It asks the reader to slow down, to notice how the earth itself carries its own forms of remembering, and to see how we, too, are made of those same materials. The body and the land are shown as mirrors of one another, each holding traces of the other’s time.
Ghosts of Living Time carries those echoes into the present. It stays close to ordinary life, to moments that are easily overlooked, to the warmth and noise of homes and relationships. Here, memory lives in touch and gesture, in the flicker of light on a wall, in the breath of someone sleeping beside you. The book explores how presence can survive within pressure, uncertainty, and care, how daily life itself becomes a site of memory and meaning. In Living Time, sorrow, joy, and interruption are all treated as valid expressions of sacred presence. The writing moves between intimacy and distance, showing how every relationship, every room, and every act of care holds its own rhythm of remembering. It asks what it means to stay open to life when it does not stand still.
Ghosts Beyond Time turns gently toward what has not yet arrived, the futures that can already be felt in the body. This is not a book of prediction or hope, but of quiet recognition. It listens for what is already approaching, the ache of what will one day be gone, and the love that endures beyond form. In Beyond Time, memory becomes an act of anticipation. The book explores emotional foresight, future longing, and the subtle ways in which time presses forward through us. It invites the reader to notice the futures that already live beneath the surface of now, to feel how tenderness and absence can coexist, and how love continues to hold us even as everything changes. It completes the trilogy not with closure, but with continuity, affirming that time moves as a circle rather than a line, and that presence is what binds every moment together.
Each of these works has a companion volume in the Weekly Reflections series. These are fifty-two small vessels, one for every week of the year, written as gentle invitations to pause and return. They are not journals or exercises, but spaces of recognition, designed to be entered slowly and often. Each week opens with a brief welcome, a sensory reflection, and a closing thought to carry into the days ahead. Deep Time: Weekly Reflections draws from stone, ash, riverbed, and fossil, carrying the atmosphere of ancient matter. Living Time: Weekly Reflections stays with the textures of ordinary life, the mug, the sink, the window, the warmth of a blanket. Beyond Time: Weekly Reflections leans toward shadow, light, and the quiet movement of what is still becoming. Each entry can be read in minutes but lingers for days. They are companions for rhythm, not routine, for remembering rather than striving.
Every book and reflection can be read freely as a PDF through the Open Access page. Audiobook editions are also available there, to listen to without cost on major platforms or as offline MP3 files.
Paperback and Kindle editions are available through Amazon
at prices that cover only their printing and hosting. If you live outside the UK, you can visit your local Amazon store and search The Ghosts Movement or the book title to find the same editions in your region.
There are no forms to fill in, no email lists, and no courses to sell. These works exist to be shared with anyone who might need a moment of recognition or return.
Let the words meet you where you are.
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