Diana Rubino Reviews: The Curse of Nefertiti (by, Charline Ratcliff)

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A Melding of Romance and Reincarnation…

As a strong believer in reincarnation and Egyptophile whose visits to the Pyramids and Sphinx were major highlights of my life, I knew this book was written for me—and for kindred souls.

Kayla is a notary who handles residential loan closings in Phoenix. But her soul is much older than her physical body, and it lived millennia ago, in Egypt, where her mother was Isis. Kayla is the reincarnation of Queen Nefertiti.

Kayla’s life on this earth finds its purpose when she meets her soul mate, Italian businessman Paolo in a Phoenix nightclub—he’s rich, handsome, charming—he possesses every quality of the classic romance hero. But that’s not all. She soon discovers they share much more than their love of Italian cuisine and an undeniable attraction. They’ve been together before—thousands of years before.

When Kayla’s grandmother has a stroke, he flies her to New York on his private plane. Thankfully, Grams is recovering nicely.

Grams tells Kayla that a woman brought her and left her for Grams to care for. The woman also robbed her of all her memories.

With this revelation she learns that her whole life has been a lesson.
She has images of standing on the shores of the Nile, her marriage to Akhenaten, the Goddess Sekhmet, her guardian and benefactor.

But her archenemy Kiya has given Akhenaten a son, Tutankhamen, and she nurtures him as her own.

Of course a past life as Nefertiti has its complications. Khentamenti is an evil God who seeks to destroy her.

Isis gives her an agonizing choice to make. This will change her destiny forever. Will she choose to stay in the present and marry Paolo, the love of her life, or fulfill her destiny in ancient Egypt?

I won’t spoil any more of it for you—read the story and be transported through time to ancient Egypt, which makes our lives in the third millennium look simple by comparison.


–Diana Rubino, Author of A Necessary End

View the four star, Amazon review here.

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