The Path of Fullness – Book 1 of The Way of Unity
Posted by Literary Titan

The Path of Fullness: The Individual Spirit of Universal Principle is a detailed and careful walk through the author’s spiritual world. It lays out “The Way of Unity” as both a theology and a daily path of practice. The book moves from the core idea of Unity as “The Coming Together of All Things” to practical tools like the Unity Prayer and Sacred Silence, then into big metaphysical frames about the Heart of Creation, the Planes of Creation, the Abode of the Soul, the thirteen Pillars of Unity, and finally the Passage of Death as a return to Oneness. It reads like a map of Spirit and a recovery manual at the same time, rooted in Indigenous teachings, personal experience of addiction and healing, and an explicit desire to honor First Nations wisdom.
I felt the writing carried a strong sense of sincerity and devotion. The tone is reverent, steady, and often gentle, even when it tackles heavy topics like genocide, generational trauma, and medical pain. I appreciated how clearly the author names his sources and speaks as an Anishinaabe and Sami man who sees this path as his own revelation, not a replacement for other traditions. The recurring phrases like “True Nature,” “Oneness,” and “The Way” give the book a kind of liturgical rhythm, and that rhythm drew me into a slower, more reflective pace than I usually have. I also found the step-by-step methods for Sacred Silence and the degrees of the Unity Prayer refreshingly concrete. They gave me something to actually try, not only to think about, and they showed that this is a lived practice, not only a set of ideas.
The writing is rich with detail. Many key terms come in with a lot of weight and importance, so they show up often and start to form a kind of inner vocabulary for the path. Sometimes that really helped the ideas settle in. I would have liked more stories to balance out the more abstract parts. The sections where the author talks very simply about his own “rock bottoms” and his return from “that space between life and death” stayed with me the most, and I would have welcomed even more of that kind of personal sharing. I also felt that the book speaks most directly to readers who already feel some openness to spiritual language, to ideas like energetic wounds, ancestral burdens, and a Spirit World filled with elders and deities who walk alongside this way. For me, that was moving and genuinely interesting.
This is not a quick or casual read. It is long, earnest, and sometimes weighty, yet it has a consistent heart: to help people realign with their True Nature, heal their wounds, honor their ancestors, and live in a way that supports the fullness of Life. I would recommend The Path of Fullness to readers who are already on a spiritual or healing journey and who are willing to sit with complex ideas, slow methods, and an Indigenous-informed vision of Unity. It will suit people in recovery, seekers who feel caught between traditions, and anyone who wants a devotional-style manual for prayer, meditation, and inner work. For the right person, this text feels like a long conversation with a committed medicine person who wants you to find your own Way.
Pages: 447 | ASIN : B0FTSJ5KFV
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About Literary Titan
The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.Posted on January 28, 2026, in Book Reviews, Four Stars and tagged author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Devin Kornelsen, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, new age, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, religion, spiritualism, spirituality, story, The Path of Fullness, writer, writing. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.
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