The Lost Laws of Manifestation Scam: Amara Callen Fake Author

The lost laws of manifestation book cover image.

So I stumbled across this thing called “The Lost Laws of Manifestation” being pushed all over the internet lately, and something just felt… off. You know that gut feeling? Yeah, I had to dig deeper. What I found was pretty much what I expected—a whole bunch of red flags screaming “scam alert.”

Let Me Tell You About This Website

The book’s being sold through solesterius.com, and here’s the thing—this site is brand spanking new:

  • Domain Name: solesterius.com
  • Domain Age: Just 7 months old
  • Created: March 30, 2025
  • Expires: March 30, 2026

Now look, I get it—everyone starts somewhere, right? Every big name was once a nobody. But when you’re selling a “life-changing manifestation secret,” you’d think there’d be some kind of track record. Still, let’s not judge a book by its domain age alone. There’s more to unpack here.

The Mysterious Amara Callen

According to the website, the author is someone named Amara Callen. Sounds legit enough, right? Except here’s where things get weird.

I searched everywhere—Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, Amazon author pages, Goodreads, you name it. Nothing. Zilch. Zero trace of this person existing anywhere on the internet except on this one website.

Even the author photo only shows up on solesterius.com. That’s it. No other websites, no social media presence, no publisher listings. It’s like this person materialized out of thin air—or more likely, was generated by AI to look credible enough to fool people scrolling by.

How This Whole Thing Actually Works

Here’s the playbook these scammers follow (because yeah, I’ve seen this pattern before):

Screenshot of Medium article promoting The Secret of Manifest Anything scam with links to Solesterius.com
Spam Medium post promoting fake manifestation book from Solesterius.com with fraudulent claims
  1. They spin up a fresh domain whenever the old one gets called out or reported
  2. They spam the link across free platforms—Medium articles, Blogger posts, YouTube videos—to build fake credibility
  3. They plaster the same promotional content everywhere to make it look like it’s trending
  4. They use buzzwords people are actually searching for: “lost laws of manifestation,” “law of attraction secrets,” “manifestation guide”—stuff that people genuinely want help with

And honestly? It works. People looking for real guidance on manifestation or self-improvement see these posts and think, “Hey, maybe this is the answer I’ve been looking for.”

The Book That’s Stolen From Someone Else

Here’s where it gets even shadier: When I Googled “The Lost Laws of Manifestation,” I actually did find a book—but not the one from solesterius.com.

Turns out, there’s a legitimate book with almost the same title: “Manifestation of the Lost Laws: Discover the Hidden Keys to Abundance, Freedom, and Peace” by Daniel S. Groff. This is a real book, part of The Creation Codes Trilogy, published in October 2025 with proper ISBN, publisher info, and everything.

But here’s what the scammers at solesterius.com did: They ripped off the title, slapped a slightly different version on their fake book—”The Lost Laws of Manifestation Part 1″—and credited it to a made-up author named “Amara Callen” instead.

Look at the covers side by side. Same concept. Same mystical vibe. Same meditation silhouette. They’re clearly trying to confuse people searching for Daniel S. Groff’s legitimate work and redirect them to their scam site instead.

So not only is this a scam—it’s plagiarism too. They’re literally stealing another author’s work (or at least the branding and concept) to make a quick buck. That’s next-level shady, even for internet scammers.

If you want to read about manifestation and lost universal laws, go buy Daniel S. Groff’s actual book from a real bookstore. Don’t give your money to these impostors at solesterius.com who are just riding on someone else’s coattails.

Final Thoughts

Everything about solesterius.com and this “Amara Callen” person screams recycled scam. The site will probably vanish in a few months, only to pop up again under a different name with the same fake promises.

If you’re genuinely interested in manifestation or the law of attraction, there are real books and teachers out there with actual credentials and track records. Before you hand over your money or even your email address to sites like this, take a few minutes to:

  • Check if the author actually exists (like, really exists—with a social media presence or published work elsewhere)
  • Look for legitimate reviews from real people, not just testimonials on their own website
  • See if the book is listed on credible platforms like Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or Goodreads

Your time and money are valuable. Don’t waste them on something that’s designed to disappear the moment people catch on.le catch on.

Author

Olivia

My goal with this blog is to share my knowledge and experience with manifestation to inspire people on their own path to personal growth. Here, you'll find practical tips, methods, and how-tos—all aimed at helping you harness the incredible power of manifestation in your life.

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