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tinmenace
12-04-2007, 03:37 PM
What is the last book you read?....and what did you think about it?

Mo0n5tar
12-04-2007, 03:47 PM
platos republic, i found it to be the instruction towards a betterment of our society, by reading the book and then viewing the current affairs it was so obvious how far ahead of his time plato was, his ideas on democracy encapsulated the ridiculousness of Tony Blairs public image, the leader in a democracy will trade political substance to appeal to the undereducated and generally ignorant masses, making politics and subsequentley life little more than a popularity contest.
I recommend you give it a read.

tru3
12-04-2007, 03:52 PM
"a game as old as empire", ed. by stephen hiatt.

the follow up book to "confessions of an economic hit man".

free excerpt here:

http://www.economichitman.com/TheBook/excerpts.htm

One Confessions supporter wrote a letter to his contacts that stated, “I decided to share my excitement about this with you because I feel that this is not just a book—it is an event, with powerful cultural and political ramifications. This book turns our understanding of history upside down, and I implore you to read it as soon as you possibly can. The more people who are aware, the more easily change can be brought about.”

This is what made Confessions successful, a large pool of passionate supporters who created a juggernaut word-of-mouth campaign. And it is this passion that Berrett-Koehler now hopes to build on by publishing the first follow-on book to Confessions—A Game As Old As Empire.

these books are causing a type of momentum mentioned in the art of war: that of a huge round boulder rolling down a moutainside thousands of feet high.

a must-read! :)

lookfar
12-04-2007, 04:30 PM
Dolphin Connection by Joan Ocean

Amazing book, totally inspiring & uplifting, loved it :)

lightbeing
12-04-2007, 05:17 PM
Dolphin Connection by Joan Ocean

Amazing book, totally inspiring & uplifting, loved it :)

Haven't read it but done allot of surfing on her websites www.etfriends.com and www.joanocean.com:)

Have you emailed her? I have a few times and got back some lovely emails, she is up there with a meeting with David:)

Her place in Hawaii is just beautiful, what a different life, swimming with dolphins and being surrounded by such positive loving energy:) .............

lookfar
12-04-2007, 05:52 PM
Haven't read it but done allot of surfing on her websites www.etfriends.com and www.joanocean.com:)

Have you emailed her? I have a few times and got back some lovely emails, she is up there with a meeting with David:)

Her place in Hawaii is just beautiful, what a different life, swimming with dolphins and being surrounded by such positive loving energy:) .............

Hi lightbeing

It's definitely worth a read IMO. I've got the other book to start as soon as I finish my Don Croft one.

I have checked out the websites, but not indepth as they contain a wealth of information & some beautiful pictures. I need to dedicate some time to a more thorough search soon. It's always been a dream of mine to swim with them & experience their energy... I need to make it a reality!!:)

xdnax
12-04-2007, 06:04 PM
"a game as old as empire", ed. by stephen hiatt.

the follow up book to "confessions of an economic hit man".

free excerpt here:

http://www.economichitman.com/TheBook/excerpts.htm

One Confessions supporter wrote a letter to his contacts that stated, “I decided to share my excitement about this with you because I feel that this is not just a book—it is an event, with powerful cultural and political ramifications. This book turns our understanding of history upside down, and I implore you to read it as soon as you possibly can. The more people who are aware, the more easily change can be brought about.”

This is what made Confessions successful, a large pool of passionate supporters who created a juggernaut word-of-mouth campaign. And it is this passion that Berrett-Koehler now hopes to build on by publishing the first follow-on book to Confessions—A Game As Old As Empire.

these books are causing a type of momentum mentioned in the art of war: that of a huge round boulder rolling down a moutainside thousands of feet high.

a must-read! :)

is this book available in the UK do you know? sounds really good, but can't find it on play.com

im reading children of the matrix at the moment. the only icke book i haven't read.
i bought a book called mind magic which seemed all perfectly spiritual and good but it just focusses (from what i've read) on "hey, this is how you can lose weight / attract money / stop smoking" etc and that is a bit tedious 4 me.

a mate lent me a book about bin laden (an OFFICIAL one) so i'm gunna read that. i know it'll probably be full of shit, but how can i form opinions if i don't know both sides, right?

btw, check out my songs on myspace!!! (link below) :)

auron
12-04-2007, 06:05 PM
Food of the Gods - By Terence Mckenna. An amazing read about Shamanic cultures, DMT, mushrooms etc. Really mind opening material :)

lightbeing
12-04-2007, 06:07 PM
Hi lightbeing

It's definitely worth a read IMO. I've got the other book to start as soon as I finish my Don Croft one.

I have checked out the websites, but not indepth as they contain a wealth of information & some beautiful pictures. I need to dedicate some time to a more thorough search soon. It's always been a dream of mine to swim with them & experience their energy... I need to make it a reality!!:)

Hi lookfar,

I will have to get the dolphin connection, it's funny you mention swimming with dolphins, I would like to do this as well!........

What with the Mars connection, now dolphins, we both have the same aspirations, spooky!!:)

I feel that the dolphins and Mars are connected, hmmm?.................

auron
12-04-2007, 06:07 PM
Here is a link to it:

http://www.cyjack.com/Cognition/FoodoftheGods.pdf

chattanova
12-04-2007, 10:04 PM
A former pentagon official reveals the U.S. Government's shocking UFO cover up 'THE DAY AFTER ROSWELL' by COL. Philip J. Corso (..he's now dead) .
It's an amazing book, he tells us how he spearheaded the Army's reverse-engineering project that led to today's:
Integrated circuit chips , Fiber optics, Lasers, Super-tenacity fibers and ''seeded'' the Roswell alien technology to giants of American industry !

Here's an interview wit corso about the book
www.v-j-enterprises.com/corso.html

tinmenace
12-04-2007, 10:28 PM
Wow! Everyone is so intense! I'm really impressed with the choice of books so far!

lucifershammer
12-04-2007, 10:45 PM
The Hiram Key by christopher knight and robert lomas.

fascinating. it seemed every other paragraph i was leaning back in my chair scratching my head thinking 'whoa'.

tinmenace
12-04-2007, 10:47 PM
... it seemed every other paragraph i was leaning back in my chair scratching my head thinking 'whoa'.

I LOVE books like that!

stikmata
13-04-2007, 02:18 AM
last book for me was this absolute gem.

http://www.scribd.com/doc/6469/David-Icke-The-Biggest-Secret

i'm sure most here are familiar with it.... maybe some aren't though.

:)

whitelightrabbit
13-04-2007, 02:46 AM
just finished amy tan 'the kitchen god's wife' about ten minutes ago.

i like her work. she's the author of 'the joy luck club'. this one had some chinese WW2 history, and a peek into the mind of the chinese american immigrant. *thumbs up*

lookfar
13-04-2007, 02:57 AM
Hi lookfar,

I will have to get the dolphin connection, it's funny you mention swimming with dolphins, I would like to do this as well!........

What with the Mars connection, now dolphins, we both have the same aspirations, spooky!!:)

I feel that the dolphins and Mars are connected, hmmm?.................

Hi lightbeing

I highly recommend getting hold of the books, they're very uplifting & have made me want to make my dream a reality, for various reasons.

Hehe, yeah I'm up for all the good things in life & EVERYTHING is connected!!:)

:)

i_am
13-04-2007, 03:46 AM
Well I decided to take a break from Spiritual and/or conspiracy books. Someone gave me Diana Gabaldon's First book in the Outlander Series to read. Well six books and 6,000 or more pages later, I have finally finished all that are written to date.

I was taking time out but found so much interesting information in these books that I would probably not have taken much notice of if I was not where I am spiritualy, and aware. They are works of fiction but all of the history and geograpical references are real. There was stuff about Freemasons in Scotland and the connections they made in Europe and the New World through this association. There was an episode with Mayer Rothschild and many more historic figures and events. So, you see, you can't take time out. When you start on this path, you can only go forward :D

Ratiocinator
13-04-2007, 05:00 AM
The New Ethics Of Eating, by Erik Markus:

Download link: http://www.megaupload.com/?d=36E71JQM


If you are unfamiliar with the information contained in this book, then prepare yourself for a shock.

a fine naked fellow
13-04-2007, 09:40 AM
The last book I read was ‘the science and the art of tracking‘.
By tom brown jr. which I liked a lot.
And the book before that was ‘hidden messages in the water‘.
By masaru emoto which I also liked a lot.

My favorite david icke book is I am me I am free.
Plus children of the matrix is good. :cool:

lumukanda
13-04-2007, 10:09 AM
i've taken a break from reading serious books for a bit, my last book was tom robbins' 'jitterbug perfume', and after having a good look at it, the book is absolutely loaded with alchemical symbolism, seems i can't get away, even if i try.

shadow cat
13-04-2007, 10:31 AM
Halfway through 'Miracle Touch' A complete guide to Hands-On Therapies that have the amazing ability to heal. by Debra Fulghum Bruce

I'm loving this book, as it's filling in many gaps in my knowledge regarding these therapies. Covers; Acupressure, Bodywork, Massage, Acupunture, Osteopathy, Chiropractic adjustment, Reflexology, Faith Healing, Laying on of Hands, Therapeutic Touch (practised in Hospitals) Reiki, Visualization, Corrective breathing........etc etc you get the idea. I'm enjoying it because it's not too complicated...gets quickly to the meat and potatoes of the particular therapy, and has sections titled 'What is it', Where did it come from?', 'How does it work?', What's it good for?', 'Where's the science?, 'Credentials' etc. Not too many testimonials either, just enough to whet the appetite;) A good reference guide on these therapies.
:)

pollock
13-04-2007, 10:52 AM
Wow! Everyone is so intense! I'm really impressed with the choice of books so far!

Yes me too:eek:
The last conspiracy book I read was Juri Linas "Architects of Deception" and the book I am reading now is "The Gormenghast Trilogy" by Mervyn Peak.
Freaky story and I am named after one of the characters:D

F

lookfar
13-04-2007, 11:30 AM
Yes me too:eek:
The last conspiracy book I read was Juri Linas "Architects of Deception" and the book I am reading now is "The Gormenghast Trilogy" by Mervyn Peak.
Freaky story and I am named after one of the characters:D

F

Hi Pollock

I read the Gormenghast Trilogy a while ago & agree it is a very freaky tale, still don't know what to make of it!?! :)

truthsayer
13-04-2007, 01:20 PM
Re-read The Celestine Prophecy (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Celestine-Prophecy-James-Redfield/dp/0553409026/ref=sr_1_1/203-2320195-9239902?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1176459695&sr=1-1) by James Redfield (Currently re-reading The Alchemist (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Alchemist-Fable-About-Following-Dream/dp/0722532938/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/203-2320195-9239902?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1176459624&sr=8-1) by Paulo Coelho)

tommi
13-04-2007, 01:24 PM
Last books I read was the amtrak wars series. Pretty cool books those..

pollock
13-04-2007, 01:53 PM
Hi Pollock

I read the Gormenghast Trilogy a while ago & agree it is a very freaky tale, still don't know what to make of it!?! :)

No, me neither, I find it fashinating though as my name would have been an other if my father had not read it and I don't believe in coincidences!

F

welfarewarrior
13-04-2007, 06:12 PM
cutting through the matrix volume 3


oh and this little fella






http://i13.tinypic.com/44tvmsi.jpg
:D

2013
13-04-2007, 06:33 PM
Re-read The Celestine Prophecy (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Celestine-Prophecy-James-Redfield/dp/0553409026/ref=sr_1_1/203-2320195-9239902?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1176459695&sr=1-1) by James Redfield (Currently re-reading The Alchemist (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Alchemist-Fable-About-Following-Dream/dp/0722532938/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/203-2320195-9239902?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1176459624&sr=8-1) by Paulo Coelho)

The alchemist is an awesome book , i read it after having a dream describe the circumstances to me the night b4 my book club magazine arrived .Spot on wicked tale .I have just re-read the celestine prophecy because of the movie release , but althought it was good to see the scenery characters etc it jumped quickly thru the story like most film of books do .
Also jsut read Stoneage soundtracks by Paul Devereux would recommend it .the acoustics of archaelogical sites .Companion to channel fours Secrets of the Dead :Sounds from the stoneage tv series .:D

beetzart
14-04-2007, 12:01 AM
The last book I read was Catch-22 by Joseph Heller. I was blown away! IMO it ranks up there with 1984. The wonderful character Yossarian is the perfect rebel to authority and highlights the absurdity of war perfectly. Then you have the officer Major Major Major Major who can only be seen when he is out and not seen when he is in. Orr who lamnents about putting conkers in his mouth. Dunbar who wants to live a dull life so time goes slower, having a fun life would mean time passes too quickly then you die. Colonel Cathart and Colonel Korn the list goes on.

One of my favourite parts is where the camp doctor Dr Doneeka is supposed to be on a plane that has crashed killing all on board, but he wasn't. Still, because the paperwork says he was on the plane then he is officially dead, this means that he is no longer entitled to pay, food, clothing the chance to go home etc because he is dead, even though he is still alive.

I can't go without mentioning Milo Minderbinder and Ex PFC Wintergreen and there invovlement in egyptian cotton that no one wants to buy. So they do a deal with the Germans to bomb the airbase in exchange for taking the cotton off their hands.

I'm now well into the sequel-Closing time- which is set in 1990's New York. It is still very funny and clever but inevitably impossible to match the original.

chattanova
04-05-2007, 04:33 PM
'Best Evidence' by Michael Schmicker

An investigative reporter's three year quest to uncover the best scientific evidence for ESP, Psychokinesis, Mental healing, Ghosts and Poltergeists, Dowsing, Mediums, Near death experiences, Reincarnation and other impossible phenomena that refuse to disappear.

who elsie
04-05-2007, 10:27 PM
The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle

This has got to be one of the best books ever. It operates on so many levels, an enjoyable story,a collection of delightful illustrations and yes, a no holds barred morality tale which pulls no punches. Carle offers no quarter and takes no prisoners. His uncompromising approach is a breath of fresh air in this age of focus groups and endless compromises.

The hero or anti hero or possibly not a hero at all but a traveller on the road to enlightenment is a caterpillar. As the title of the work suggests this is a very hugry caterpillar. He seeks to satisfy his hunger by what can only be descibed as an orgy of junk food eating. However, this binge session leaves him feeling ill and somewhat the worse for wear. He then eats some simple
honest woodland fare (or leaves to be precise). This really does the trick and is the cataylst for his eventual transision from caterpillar to butterfly.

In a time when so many of us feel empty and hungry for something more than materialism and aspirational life style progression, this book is a wake up call. How can we truely metamorphose into a butterfly when we are so full of crap?

I'm not suggesting that simply eating leaves could make us happier people, but perhaps a return to a less harmful more natural life could truely set us free to spread our brightly coloured wings and soar a little higher than we do now.

Carle ia a visionary, pointing the way forward and as so often sometimes, it's necessary to take three steps back before we are ready to move forward.

This book is a blast and I have great pleasure in highly recommending it to one and all.

Happy reading.

(courtesy Lord Ciaran D'arcy www.cultofpenn.co.uk)

peter19
05-05-2007, 12:51 AM
the last book i read was this i think, spirit quest a journey out of body- http://www.astralsociety.com/as/Forum/index.php/topic,16939.0.html
seemed a decent read for anyone intrested in out of body experiences.

and this is a book what i havent read yet but me dad as read it and he says its a decent book, so it might be of interest to anyone. :)
http://murdomacdonaldbayneyoga.homestead.com/ch1yoga.html

lottie
05-05-2007, 04:30 AM
The last book i read was 'The Celestine Prophecy' (finished last week) totally amazing and inspirational book- even bought 'The Tenth Insight' off ebay to read soon but before that, ive just recieved a copy of 'The Divine Matrix' by Gregg Braden, which ive just tucked into and im totally absorbed in after only a few pages!! :D
Also have 'Iam me i am free' to hand, on the side by my back door (where i smoke) so i can flick through whilst havin a smoke!!;) always amazes me how different books are once you've woken up, couldn't believe how much different 'i am me i am free' was the 2nd time round (more awake) i gotta read 'Infinite Love' again now im more awake, its like you missed bits out the first time round or you just didnt understand at the time!!:rolleyes: :)

chattanova
13-05-2007, 02:51 PM
Just finished 'MJ-12 and the riddle of Hangar 18 - New evidence' by Timothy G. Beckley and Sean Casteel..
This book is amazing, with chapters like 'Did a UFO ever crash in Central Park' , 'The day a UFO crashed inside Russia' , 'the night a UFO came crashing down over Ohio' & 'Majestic 12' .
Here's a lot of info on other crashes than the Roswell crash.
Pretty interesting:)

http://img142.imageshack.us/img142/9485/mj12ir5.jpg

ho1ogram
13-05-2007, 03:37 PM
The Washington Square Ensemble by Madison Smartt Bell.
It was interesting and fun, and set in the seedy side of NYC circa early 80's. Fiction. From the cover blurbs "The most exotic bunch of sweet characters.." and "Thoroughly entertaining.. a captivating account of malice, danger and exilerating insanity." Sums it up pretty well.

stickylolly
06-06-2007, 02:01 AM
the last book I read was one of the best reads I have had in a long time .... check it out .... The Traveler John Twelve Hawks http://www.randomhouse.com/features/traveler/

tru3
06-06-2007, 02:31 AM
The last book I read was Catch-22 by Joseph Heller. I was blown away! IMO it ranks up there with 1984. The wonderful character Yossarian is the perfect rebel to authority and highlights the absurdity of war perfectly. Then you have the officer Major Major Major Major who can only be seen when he is out and not seen when he is in. Orr who lamnents about putting conkers in his mouth. Dunbar who wants to live a dull life so time goes slower, having a fun life would mean time passes too quickly then you die. Colonel Cathart and Colonel Korn the list goes on.

One of my favourite parts is where the camp doctor Dr Doneeka is supposed to be on a plane that has crashed killing all on board, but he wasn't. Still, because the paperwork says he was on the plane then he is officially dead, this means that he is no longer entitled to pay, food, clothing the chance to go home etc because he is dead, even though he is still alive.

I can't go without mentioning Milo Minderbinder and Ex PFC Wintergreen and there invovlement in egyptian cotton that no one wants to buy. So they do a deal with the Germans to bomb the airbase in exchange for taking the cotton off their hands.

I'm now well into the sequel-Closing time- which is set in 1990's New York. It is still very funny and clever but inevitably impossible to match the original.

catch 22 is my favorite novel of the 20th century. the summary description of the alienation of living in a corporate world.

just finished "transcending the levels of consciousness", by david r. hawkins. much more focused than his last effort, "truth vs. falsehood".

a lot of people have issues with hawkins, but i find him to be a reliable source of information about the nature of consciousness. admittedly, he has picked up some, imo, "inauspicious" alliances. :( i would certainly recommend "power vs. force" to any serious truthseeker.

i_am
06-06-2007, 03:03 AM
i've taken a break from reading serious books for a bit, my last book was tom robbins' 'jitterbug perfume', and after having a good look at it, the book is absolutely loaded with alchemical symbolism, seems i can't get away, even if i try.

I found the same thing

http://www.davidicke.com/forum/showpost.php?p=28313&postcount=19

These books were about time travel, henges, stone circles, all sorts of good things :p

No you can never look at things the same way again. :D

montag
06-06-2007, 03:07 AM
catch 22 is my favorite novel of the 20th century. the summary description of the alienation of living in a corporate world.

just finished "transcending the levels of consciousness", by david r. hawkins. much more focused than his last effort, "truth vs. falsehood".

a lot of people have issues with hawkins, but i find him to be a reliable source of information about the nature of consciousness. admittedly, he has picked up some, imo, "inauspicious" alliances. :( i would certainly recommend "power vs. force" to any serious truthseeker.
I keep hearing that about Catch 22, I bought a copy from Amazon a year or so ago and haven't yet got around to reading it.. After you and Beetzarts glowing review I'll have to get on to it. I've also got a copy of pwer vs force I haven't read, so it looks like I've got a bit of 'catching' up to do..

Thanks for the tips..

Montag

BTW if you hadn't noticed my username is from the main character(Guy Montag) of a very good book I read recently, Fahrenheit 451 and the last book I'd only finished reading yesterday was Gods Gladiators by Stuie Wilde..

lemonique
06-06-2007, 03:16 AM
What is the last book you read?....and what did you think about it?

Hi Tin menace, Well, I am a Gemini, so I always read 2 books at the same time. This time I'm reading 3 books:confused:

1) Apocalypse 2012 by Lawrence E. Joseph (An optimist investigates the end of civilisation) Written in a light vein but with factual evidence regarding sun spots etc, a good read, and I'm learning quite a bit of scientific stuff.

2) Wisdom of the Peaceful Warrior by Dan Millman
Love this guys books and I'm nearly through it....great read!

3) And just for fun!! Love and Louis XIV by Antonia Fraser
What a guy ;) What a bast-ard he turned out to be eh? just like all of their kith and kin. To defeat the 'enemy' it can sometimes pay to read about their strategy?

Cheers
Lem.

lumukanda
06-06-2007, 10:30 AM
at the moment i'm reading neil gaiman's 'american gods', once again a brilliant book by gaiman, i highly reccomend it, it's a novel but deals with what happens to the gods of the various cultures who immigrated to america over the years.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Gods (warning : spoilers)
http://www.amazon.com/American-Gods-Neil-Gaiman/dp/0380789035

tinmenace
06-06-2007, 01:52 PM
Not exactly a book, but I've been hopelessly addicted to these comics since childhood.


http://www.globalfailure.com/images/asterix.jpg

Asterix And The Secret Weapon

peter19
06-06-2007, 02:30 PM
currently reading this book - william buhlman adventures beyond the body - http://www.4shared.com/file/10110870/2a3ebf81/Buhlman_William_-_Adventures_Beyond_the_Body_Astral_Projection.html ?s=1

page 36-My interest in physics increased with the number of out-of-body experiences I had.
When out-of-body, I would closely observe the energy structures around me. I
became fascinated with the nonphysical forms and substances I encountered. I
recognized that each environment and dimension within the interior of the universe
has specific similarities and differences. The most significant difference appears to
be the degree of responsiveness to thought of a given nonphysical environment.
Some nonphysical environments are easily molded by thought while others are
extremely resistant. I believe that all nonphysical energy is thought-responsive;
however, when a group of individuals maintains the same image or beliefs, the
group creates, molds, and maintains a consensus reality. In effect, group thoughtenergy
forms, stabilizes, and actually solidifies nonphysical energy. The larger the
group (some number in the millions), the more stable the immediate energy
environment becomes. This is an important discovery because it explains the vast
differences encountered when exploring the nonphysical dimensions. For example,
the first nonphysical dimension is a parallel energy world almost identical to the
physical universe. This dimension of energy existing close to the physical is molded
by the consensus thoughts of the six billion inhabitants existing in the physical.
The underlying cause of this phenomenon appears to be remarkable: consciousness
creates reality. All reality, including matter, is shaped and molded by thought.
Creation itself is the result of conscious thought-energy influencing, arranging, and
manifesting form and substance as we know it. Countless nonphysical explorations
into the interior of universe confirm this observation. It’s only the density of matter
that obscures the truth of this from our physical senses. In the physical world,
consciousness uses biological vehicles for its expression. Our physical bodies are
the direct tools of our consciousness; our thoughts direct our bodies to build the
reality we experience every day of our lives. This process of consciousness creating
reality is more important than words can begin to express. Our recognition of this
reality is the first step to true mastery of ourselves and our surroundings. Each of
us possesses the creative ability and power to shape and mold his or her ideal
physical, emotional, and intellectual surroundings. It is up to us, however, to
recognize and implement our creative ability. Our recognition of the creative power
of consciousness will dramatically affect both our immediate future and the
evolution of our species. Until we truly comprehend and consciously control the
unseen energies flowing through us, we will be bound to the dense molecular forms
that surround us. Our evolution from a physical creature to a multidimensional,
nonphysical being is directly linked to the recognition and conscious control of our
thought-energy. Once we truly comprehend our individual ability to shape and mold
the energy around us, we can begin to take full responsibility for our thoughts. With
every thought and deed we become aware that we are the creative artists of our
lives.

danielg
06-06-2007, 04:12 PM
To Have or to Be, by Eric Fromm...
Currently and slowly toiling through Gestalt Therapy by Frederick Pearls...

nessa felagund
06-06-2007, 05:14 PM
I am almost finished reading The Tutankhamun Prophecies[I] by Maurice Cotterell. Very interesting theory regarding solar science by decoding the treasures found in King Tut's tomb.

Cotterell's also written two other books I intend to read: [I]The Mayan Prophecies andThe Supergods.

misscpb
06-06-2007, 06:31 PM
Dolphin Connection by Joan Ocean

Amazing book, totally inspiring & uplifting, loved it :)

I agree, the other one dolphins into the future by Joan Ocean is also great.

lookfar
06-06-2007, 06:43 PM
I agree, the other one dolphins into the future by Joan Ocean is also great.

Yeah I also have that one too (after your earlier recommendation:)), but I still haven't got around to reading it yet.

I have so many piled up waiting to be read... there's just not enough time in the day at the moment!!:(

11kushna11
06-06-2007, 06:50 PM
Currently reading 'Between Life & Death' by Delores Cannon. Next up: The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins.

Anders Lindman
06-06-2007, 07:37 PM
The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield

http://www.amazon.com/Thirteenth-Tale-Novel-Diane-Setterfield/dp/0743298020/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/002-4525815-3441602?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1181147618&sr=8-1

chattanova
23-06-2007, 10:49 AM
http://img40.picoodle.com/img/img40/8/6/23/f_liquidconspm_c741461.jpg

(Dice - 4)

barbitone
23-06-2007, 01:38 PM
I'm always reading multiple books at a time. At the moment it's :

"Astral Dynamics" - Robert Bruce. Absolute quality.
"The Art of Dreaming" - Carlos Castenada Castenada's stuff is legendary.
"Civilization One"
"Holographic Universe" - Michael Talbot. I assume most people are familiar with this one.
"Telecult Powers" old book about telepathy, psychokenesis etc...
"The Celestine Vision" - James Redfield. I've read the series so I'm starting on the others.

And I just got the newest edition of "Uncensored" Magazine that comes out of New Zealand. Very good mag. Highly recommended.

:D

ngawaka19
23-06-2007, 02:09 PM
Tohungaa by Paul Moon

Emerging Soul by Helen Barnes

both local authors

Tohunga, to explain what that is in English is difficult, what would be a close description is a shaman or medicine man, but even then, to think in Maori terms, its not quite on the mark. In this book Paul Moon interviews one of the very few tohunga left in NZ. It seems that tohunga used the equivalent to Quantum Physics as a tool for divination, healing, manifesting and to keep the balance with nature. In 1957 the Crown introduced a 4th article in the Treaty of Waitangi, stating that Maori could not, ever again, use the tohunga for healing. This was devastating to Maori. But of course, Maori still have tohunga, not many as was before, and some of the old ways have been lost forever.

Emerging Soul is the journal of a non maori nzer who takes you with her on her spiritual awakening. great book

arohamai

tejas
23-06-2007, 02:24 PM
'Infinite love is the only truthm everything else is illusion'

and

'Derren brown, trick of the mind!'

phoenix1
23-06-2007, 02:29 PM
John Anthony Wests " Serpent in the Sky" I thought as usual of the beauty and Love of Ancient Egypt in its primal time.

Also a lot of RA Schwaller de Lubichtz on a number of subjects fom Esoterism ans symbol to Number and allsorts by him.

What did I think of him and allways have done .... Genius

Also been reading the Tony Bushby stuff his 2nd 3 rd and 4th book.... what did i think.. just like i allways have .. dogma and chrhristianity and religions are lies and mind controll of the most insidious type known to mankind.

ALL the Love .. see ta all back here soon.

Phoenix:):D:D

dragonfly
23-06-2007, 02:52 PM
The last book, i read was "Life! Reflections on your journey" by Louise L. Hay

I find it to be a very positive read, for me and allows me to reflect on my own journey, and old and new thoughts as well. Somehow enlargens my inner realm, for the better...

Brightness, from Dragonfly :)

paolo
25-06-2007, 03:28 AM
"Wilhelm Reich in Hell"
Written 20 years ago, this has even more relevance today.
Though I regard Robert Anton Wilson as in the end a twerp, this play and it's intoduction has a million beautiful truths, even though I don't agree with many of the conclusions. You can get it dirt cheap from Amazon, and I suggest you do.

king
25-06-2007, 04:41 AM
Millennium; Winners and Losers in the Coming Order (Paperback)
by Jacques Attali (Author)
http://www.amazon.com/Millennium-Winners-Losers-Coming-Order/dp/0812920880

great book

gives you great insight into power struggle, dwindling resources, European super state an future of U.S.

baron von lotsov
25-06-2007, 05:58 AM
I hardly read books these days. The last was an exception to my normal rule and I read Dr John Coleman's Committee of 300 book. It was worth it but anything less would bore me by the end of it. I get most of my info from forums, real life, a few papers, websites and so on but other than that I reason it out using my head. The book before that was Tim Berners-Lee's book about inventing the Internet. I admire his brain, a very clever chap indeed and worth a read as well.

aznality
27-06-2007, 09:54 AM
Serpent Grail.

ashyr
27-06-2007, 11:05 AM
the last book i read was "THE GINGER MAN" some really old literature. not really old but yeah.

anyway ive realise. recently i cant read books really. i get people asking me all the time. wtf do u do with your time. what did you do all day. im wondering. yeah what did i do? but i realise now i can read info on the net all day. i just start reading pages and pages for hours. so i dont know what it is. i think its when i read a book i like to get comfortable. when i read one page i have to turn the next page or the book on a angle and i cant stay comfortable i think.
=(

oneofmany
27-06-2007, 12:40 PM
The Secret in the Bible by Tony Bushby

limelady
27-06-2007, 12:53 PM
Stuart Wilde's God's Gladiators

Michael Tsarions Atlantis, Alien Visitation & Genetic Manipulation

re-read of Jaques Vallee's Passport to Magonia (http://www.amazon.com/Passport-Magonia-folklore-flying-saucers/dp/B0006CPDGI): From Folklore to Flying Saucers......the only UFO investigator who's come even close to digging out the truth IMO.

John Major Jenkin's Maya Cosmogenesis 2012

Dr. Steven Greer's Hidden Truth - Forbidden Knowledge

William Henry's Cloak of the Illuminati

aznality
27-06-2007, 04:52 PM
We really need the books forum going, lol. Some of you people listed some pretty interesting titles and I would love to hear about them more. =)

dondaz
27-06-2007, 07:20 PM
There's some good books on this thread - I'll get round to reading some in the future I'm sure.

I am currently half way through The Biggest Secret but the last book I read was:

Ordinary Men - Police Batallion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland

http://i164.photobucket.com/albums/u39/dazp5/OrdinaryMen-frontcover.jpg

Take a group of middle-aged men, none of them criminal minded, put them in a uniform, with a gun, tell them a few lies and they will kill children. Period!

It is literally easer done than said, especially if the people are "normal".

Here's a good write-up that tells it better than I:

This detailed and harrowing study of a single group of mostly middle-aged policemen from provincial Germany. Far from being demonic and hate-filled sadists, most of the group had no history of anti-semitism or of far right politics.

Browning explores the motivation of these men and the horribly familiar mechanisms of man-management and group solidarity that reduced a team of "ordinary men" into a bestial instrument of madness. It is a book that offers no comfort to those who seek to explain the Holocaust in terms of German exceptionalism, but it is a significant contribution to the history of World War II.

There is a human tendency to categorise and blame groups of people because it is easier than facing the possibility that anyone is capable of horror. An example would be the claim that 'religion causes wars' - it places the burden on an external agency, on the 'other' rather than the fact that anyone can commit an atrocity.

This is what Browning's book illustrates beautifully; the gradual steps these ordinary men take on the path to atrocity. Browning refers to a number of psychological studies as well as the historical record to illustrate his points and the book is nothing if not frightening in that you can see how this could all to easily happen again. From a reluctance to let down their comrades to the difficulty of disobeying orders from a higher authority you can see how some of these men ended up becoming killers.

This is an important book and it deserves a wide audience.

Bloody good read!

Darren

chattanova
27-06-2007, 07:24 PM
We really need the books forum going, lol. Some of you people listed some pretty interesting titles and I would love to hear about them more. =)

Thats very true, there are rumors that an own Book section/forum will come (soon I hope).
If not this should be a 'sticky' ,cause this is an excellent way to find new books to read.

graflok
27-06-2007, 07:33 PM
I'm currently reading this book:

http://i17.ebayimg.com/01/i/05/17/40/0b_12.JPG

So far, it's fascinating. :)

lookfar
27-06-2007, 08:53 PM
Oh graflok I wanted to read that a while back when I saw it on hiddenmysteries.com. It was quite expensive to have posted to the UK as I recall so I didn't get it. I'm glad you're enjoying it!!:)

graflok
27-06-2007, 10:41 PM
Yes, it is a bit pricey for an average-size paperback. I found a
signed copy at a decent price.

Then I found out there is a later edition with some more chapters:
link (http://www.hiddenmysteries.com/caverns/)

But, in any case, I'm really enjoying the book. It is chock full
of great info. Lots of anecdotal stuff, both from folklore and
more modern accounts (which I like). Much reptilian info too.

BTW, according to folklore, there is a common substance that
many underworld types are afraid of and are repelled by.

Get the book and find out. :D

lumukanda
16-07-2007, 10:39 AM
just started graham hancock's 'talisman', if it's anything like his other books, i'm sure i'll be posting on it again.

chandrakavi
16-07-2007, 11:32 AM
MYSTIC OSHO USED TO THROW IN HUMOR IN ALL OF HIS SPIRITUAL DISCOURSES TO BREAK THE ICE OF SERIOUSNESS ON EVERYTHING,
SOMETIMES HE WOULD TEACH AND MAKE HIS POINT USING JOKES,
SOME VERY GOOD ONES.

THIS IS A NUMBERED BOOK CALLED
"Take it very Seriously"
A revolutionary insight into jokes


Starts with a quote by osho: "The sense of humor should be directed toward oneself----it is a very great thing to laugh at oneself
and he who can laugh at himself gradually becomes full of concern and compassion for others.
In the entire world no event,
no subject, invites laughter
like oneself"
It has about 2000 jokes

here is a spicy one:

During his world tour , the Pope arrives to America.
When he comes out of the plane ,there is a big crowd standing on the runway waving flags, shouting : ELVIS ,ELVIS!!!l

THE POPE LOOKS AT THEM, FULL OF HOLINESS ,KISSES THE GROUND AND SAYS MILDLY ,"MY CHILDREN LOOK: I am not Elvis, I am the Pope."
He enters the airport hall and notices a mass of people standing there ,dancing waving flags and shouting at him: ELVIS, ELVIS!!
A little bit indignant, he blesses the people ,and very softly he says, "Oh, no my dear sheep, I am not Elvis, I am the Pope"
Centered again, he goes upstairs to his suite ,opens the door and suddenly sees two beautiful naked women lying in his bed ,waving little flags, shouting ecstatically at him, ELVIS, ELVIS!!!
Immediately throwing off his clothes, he jumps on the bed and starts singing,
"You ain't nothing but a hound dog..." :D:);):rolleyes::D

I have also been re-reading THE BIGGEST SECRET
an all time great book of David Icke (or is it Elvis?):D:D

aznality
16-07-2007, 12:12 PM
Robert Peterson - Out Of Body Experiences

klinker
16-07-2007, 12:24 PM
William Cooper - Behold a pale horse.

hagbard_celine
17-07-2007, 01:42 PM
William Cooper - Behold a pale horse.

Good book! It wasn't a lone nut that took Cooper out, it was a squad car full of them!

I've just finished "Underworld" by Graham Hancock and I'm now reading "Druid Magic"

wormhole
18-07-2007, 12:45 AM
Just finished "The Mayan Code - Time Acceleration and Awakening the World Mind" by Barbara Hand Clow.

The Mayan Code is a deep exploration of how, as we approach the end of the Mayan Calendar, time and consciousness are accelerating, giving us a new understanding of the universe. Using Carl Johan Calleman's research, as well as other Mayan Calendar scholars, Barbara Hand Clow examines 16.4 billion years of evolution to decode the creative patterns of Earth - the World Mind. These great patterns culminate in 2011, and then during 2012 major astrological influences will inspire us to attain oneness and enlightenment.

The Mayan Code shows how the time cycles of the Calendar match important periods in the evolutionary data banks of Earth and the Milky Way Galaxy. These stages of evolution are converging during the final stage of the Calendar, the period between 1999 and 2011. War and territoriality, resource management and separation from nature, are all parts of daily events we must process during these few short years: Evidence of the tightening spiral of time that we experience as time speeding up. Barbara councils that our own personal healing is the most important factor as we prepare to make this critical leap in human evolution - now referred to as the awakening of the World Mind.

chandrakavi
18-07-2007, 05:03 AM
I CHING by RICHARD WILHELM

A unique book in more ways than one: at the same time it is a book and a tool. A great of great wisdom about life which consists of achieving harmony of the individual with the changing flow of the universal currents.

As an oracle book it provides an instrument to find this possible harmony,
to obtain the right orientation.

Every man has his TAO and the best for him is to follow it. The oracle puts you in place with the TAO of the universal laws ,and points to him his own tao,

All taken from chinese wisdom.

The text is from the beginning of the kingdom of the Chou Dynasty 1122 to 221 before our era. :)

wormhole
18-07-2007, 09:30 AM
I-Ching by Richard Wilhelm :)

amazing - will have to get another copy of that one.
i remember a quote from one of the sages (on his death bed) saying that if he had more time he would spend it studying the I-Ching.

yvonne
18-07-2007, 05:48 PM
I just finished "The Mayan Calendar and the Transformation of Consciousness" by Carl Johan Calleman and "The Mayan Code Time Acceleration and Awakening The World Mind" by Barbara Hand Clow.

And I'm now reading "The Sirius Mystery" by Robert Temple.

I loved and believe the two Mayan books!

lapis
18-07-2007, 10:00 PM
Just finished "The Mayan Code - Time Acceleration and Awakening the World Mind" by Barbara Hand Clow.

The Mayan Code is a deep exploration of how, as we approach the end of the Mayan Calendar, time and consciousness are accelerating, giving us a new understanding of the universe. Using Carl Johan Calleman's research, as well as other Mayan Calendar scholars, Barbara Hand Clow examines 16.4 billion years of evolution to decode the creative patterns of Earth - the World Mind. These great patterns culminate in 2011, and then during 2012 major astrological influences will inspire us to attain oneness and enlightenment.

The Mayan Code shows how the time cycles of the Calendar match important periods in the evolutionary data banks of Earth and the Milky Way Galaxy. These stages of evolution are converging during the final stage of the Calendar, the period between 1999 and 2011. War and territoriality, resource management and separation from nature, are all parts of daily events we must process during these few short years: Evidence of the tightening spiral of time that we experience as time speeding up. Barbara councils that our own personal healing is the most important factor as we prepare to make this critical leap in human evolution - now referred to as the awakening of the World Mind.


I'm about half way through this new book by Barbara Hand Clow - The Mayan Code - Time Acceleration and Awakening the World Mind. I've been hoping for a couple of years that she would write one on the Mayan calendar and she finally has. I knew there had to be so much more to it all and there is. Another amazing book from Clow.

Click on each of the book images for more info and drawings/charts.

http://www.handclow2012.com/bookcdvi.htm

chandrakavi
21-07-2007, 07:38 AM
THE BOOK OF UNDERSTANDING
Creating Your Own Path To Freedom

In this groundbreaking work, Osho identifies, loosens,
and ultimately helps to untie the knots of fear and misunderstanding
that restrict us---
leaving us free to discover and create our own individual path to freedom.


The other book:

INNER WAR AND PEACE
Insights from the Bhagavad Gita

WHAT IS THE SOURCE OF OUR ANGUISH?

WHAT ARE THE ROOTS OF VIOLENCE?

WHAT ARE THE POLITICS BEHIND EVERY WAR?

Arjuna, the tortured and reluctant hero
speaks with his enlightened mentor, Krishna
on the eve of the Mahabharata war. Throwing
a brilliant light on Krishna's responses. Osho exposes the roots of our contemporary personal and global problems and proposes his timeless solution.

danielg
21-07-2007, 01:40 PM
I-Ching by Richard Wilhelm

amazing - will have to get another copy of that one.
i remember a quote from one of the sages (on his death bed) saying that if he had more time he would spend it studying the I-Ching.
The Illustrated I Ching by R.L Wing is worth checkin out too. :)

wormhole
21-07-2007, 10:08 PM
I've not come across the illustrated I-Ching - but thanks for the pointer ...


Another book i read a few months back was : The secret teachings of plants

Throughout the world there is a tradition of direct perception of nature through the "intelligence of the heart." Recent discoveries in neuroscience have proven that over 50 percent of the heart is comprised of neural cells. The heart is, in fact, a brain in it's own right. Heart-centered perception can be exceptionally accurate and detailed in it's information gathering capacities, as indigenous and ancient peoples assert.

Stephen Harrod Buhner explores this heart-centered mode of perception in great detail. He includes leading-edge information on the physical mechanisms of heart-based cognition and explores the work of numerous remarkable people who perceived the world with their hearts, including Henry David Thoreau; George Washington Carver; Masanobu Fukuoka, author of The One Straw Revolution; and the great German poet and scientist Goethe, who studied the metamorphosis of plants. Buhner shows us how these great thinkers achieved a direct perception of nature using the cognitive abilities of the heart. He provides the knowledge and techniques necessary to develop heart-based perception, which is our birthright. He teaches us how to learn the medicinal uses of plants directly from the plants themselves and to understand the soul-making process that such deep connection with the world engenders.

STEPHEN HARROD BUHNER is an Earth Poet and senior researcher for the Foundation for Gaian Studies. He lectures throughout the United States on herbal medicine, the sacredness of plants, and the intelligence of nature.

chandrakavi
23-07-2007, 08:04 PM
Check in this interview Bush's "eclectic reading list"

www.youtube.com/watch?v=9vajQCo2PCQ

chandrakavi
28-07-2007, 08:17 AM
HEY wORMHOLE!
AND ALL

Read THE SECRET LIFE OF PLANTS by Peter Tompkins and Christopher Bird.

A very interesting book, that shows that plants are marvelous live beings,
unique creatures tht amist the silence they produce their own food and contitute the main source of richness in our planet. Including carbon and petroleum oil, were vegetal life in the past.

Experiments on communication of plants show, as Paracelso and Mesmer, that all live beings----men, plants, The Earth, planets and the stars---are related intimately among themselves: what affects one of them affects the rest.

Only knowing THE SECRET LIFE OF PLANTS WE WILL ARRIVE to the goal that integrates with our environment to live in harmony with the universe
and know ourselves.

Names of interesting chapters:

Plants that can read your thoughts
plants that open doors
plants grow in order to plese you
plants and electromagnetism
The mystery of aura in plants and in men.

Plants help to know about your health
The Earth: life substance
mind over matterEnergy fields in human beings and in plants.

It is a very interesting book, really worth reading!!
Enjoy it!:D:)

gold
15-08-2007, 09:17 AM
I've just finished reading; 'Is There Life After Death' by Anthony Peake (an extraordinary science of what happens when we die, if we die)
You'd be fooled into believing that this book is about life after death and the realms, but in fact Anthony Peake Argues, there is no death, and even goes on to explain how during this life we are living now, we have all died many times without realising it by passing into identical parallel universes.
Fascinating book, I couldn't put it down.

fuknut
21-08-2007, 08:44 AM
I LOVE YOU

Hi everybody. Started reading "The Stars are Falling" by Matthew Delooze yesterday. Halfway through and yea - what a book !!

Get it from here :http://www.lulu.com/content/888004

THANK YOU

sgabllab
23-08-2007, 03:19 PM
cosmic voyage by courtney brown.
book about scientific remote viewing of aliens.

here a link http://www.courtneybrown.com/publications/cosmic.html

eat_a_grey
25-08-2007, 04:08 AM
I am about 2/3rds the way through 'Nuclear War,Whats in it for you?'

I am borderline obsessed with the coldwar/nuclear war and propaganda and paranoia from the 1950's-1980's.

All those duck n cover drill we ran when I was a kid,really put a cramp on my psyche.I have chronic re-occurring nightmares of a nuclear holocaust,I have had them since I was a little boy.I am 40 now and at least twice a week for about the last 30 years I have had horrific dreams about nuclear war.

I guess reading these types of books either fuels the fire,or helps me with my insight to what was really going on :confused:

freedomnonfighter
25-08-2007, 07:37 AM
The First and Last Freedom by Jiddu Krishnamurti

Atlantis, Alien Visitation, & Genetic Manipulation by Michael Tsarion
- have it in ebook form so my progress on that is quite slow :(

have to order that new Matthew Delooze book,
as I'm not familiar with him yet.

adzboarder
29-08-2007, 12:51 AM
The very hungry caterpillar.

An excellent read, teaches 2 year olds to count and to identify fruit and vegetables, and also shows that eating loads of crap gives you a stomach ache. Additionally it teaches days of the week and crucially, about metamorphosis.

They don't make books like this anymore, so well worth a look for new parents as it actually helps your child's development rather than corrupts it. :cool:

_underscore_
29-08-2007, 10:55 AM
D-Day June 6, 1944: The Climactic Battle of World War II

Excerpted from the book, a chilling quote made by Lt. Sidney Salomon, 2nd Platoon, C Company, 2nd Ranger Battalion:

"Bodies lay still, where they had fallen, trickles of blood reddening the sand. Some of the wounded were crawling as best they could, some with a look of dispair and bewilderment on their tortured and painracked faces. Others tried to get back on their feet, only to be hit again by enemy fire. Bodies rolled back and forth at the water's edge, the English Channel almost laughing as it showed its might over man and played with the bodies as a cat would with a mouse."

father ted
29-08-2007, 12:58 PM
Blue Blood True Blood and Healer's Handbook by Swerdlow, BBTB is highly recommended even if you're unsure about the validity.

chattanova
30-08-2007, 10:50 AM
http://img31.picoodle.com/img/img31/9/8/30/f_storm_c6afcc4.jpg

''The Power Behind The Power'' written by Norway's answer on David Icke ;):)

Mostly about: Rothschilds, Bilderbergers, The Vatican, Symbolism, Subliminals, NWO, AIDS, Chemtrails, HAARP etc..

earthseed
31-08-2007, 06:33 AM
Reread Gods of Eden

phoenix1
07-09-2007, 07:26 PM
Anyone read any of these??? Advertised by word of mouth Mainly... though I heard of them that way.... I got a discoumt from Nexus Magazine.
http://www.nexusmagazine.com/ (which also has a lot of good reads in the Articles Section) The Editor said of Anastasia ..."If you raes one book only in your life .... READ Anastasia"... well I'm glad I have.. I will keep going back and reading them too.

She starts out with saying "I exist For those whom I exist" so let that be some sort of guage as to the quallities of this MAN (kind( as she refers to Man.


Well Anastasia is the best read I've read in "spititual /Healing" and like topics for sometime.... critical reading in my oppinion for a seeker of Truth and Discerner of life.

Im now on Book 3 .. This is is book 1 where it all started... REAL ... funny , spriritually high as is gets, it confronts all emotions.. and elevates the conciousness no end... when ever I feel down.... I'll pick up one of these .. I know how the books "work now" they aint like any other book... they are etherical ..."working functional books" The best words can achieve to visualise and , re- affirm a lot of wisdom you know.. and some wisdom we are unaware of...Dont take my word for it... take a read.. (ALL READ IN ORDER IS THE WAY TO GO TO GET THE FULLEST OUT).... Blew me away totally the power of the MAN MIND!!.... I am know even more sure of why i'm here.

(Thanks Mahaberrat from the old DI Forum without whom I would not have known of them... why the hell didnt I listen to you In 2005 lol... we where tooooo busy with the Egypt Thread maybe lol)


Details on The Official Site
http://www.ringingcedars.com/


The Books Page..Not all are translated from Russian yet... I have thr 6 that are... http://www.ringingcedars.com/books.htm

Book 1: Anastasia ......BTW(nothing to do with The Tsars)

http://www.ringingcedars.com/imag/cover1_200.jpg

Book 2: The Ringing Cedars of Russia

http://www.ringingcedars.com/imag/cover2_200.jpg

(on this one now... Oh boy I cannot but them down !! lol
Book 3: The Space Of Love

http://www.ringingcedars.com/imag/cover3_200.jpg

Book 4: Co-Creation

http://www.ringingcedars.com/imag/cover4_200.jpg

Book 5: Who are we ?

http://www.ringingcedars.com/imag/cover5_200.jpg

Book 6 : The Book of Kin

http://www.ringingcedars.com/imag/cover6_200.jpg

NOT RELEASED YET

Book 7: The Energy Of Life

http://www.ringingcedars.com/imag/zkr_english_7.jpg

Book 8 (in 2 parts = 2 books)Part 1 The New Civilisation

http://www.ringingcedars.com/imag/zkr_english_8.jpg

Book 8 (9 really) The Rites Of Love (appears to have the same cover)

http://www.ringingcedars.com/imag/zkr_english_82.jpg

So there ya go with what i'm reading... the (non forced replies and accolades speak for themselves) and nobody here was looking for fame... especially Anastasia.
Reviews Page http://www.ringingcedars.com/reviews.htm

I think with those in our lives who are missing "pieces of fulness" these series are the greatest gift you can buy them with money.


Namaste



I honor the place in you
in which the entire Universe dwells,

I honor the place in you
which is of Love, of Truth, of Light and of Peace,

When you are in that place in you,
and I am in that place in me,
we are One.


Phoenix:)

phoenix1
07-09-2007, 07:28 PM
sorry double post..

sunyatta60
08-09-2007, 02:40 AM
What is the last book you read?....and what did you think about it?


Entangled Minds by Dr Dean Radinvery appropriate in light of the recent news that Physicist have now proven Bells Theorem :D

I am currently reading Prey by Michael Crichton a smashing novel


Reality 90% Illusion 10% Confusion
Albert Einstein

yeiayel
08-09-2007, 03:50 AM
http://i203.photobucket.com/albums/aa35/gabriele_07/waine.jpg

sunyatta60
10-09-2007, 12:13 PM
I am Now reading The Disappearance Of The Universe by Gary R. Renard

As is the macrocosm, so is the microcosm.
As is the atom, so is the universe.
As is the human body, so is the cosmic body.
As is the human mind, so is the cosmic mind.
Indian proverb

scar
22-09-2007, 07:44 PM
Reread Gods of Eden

Just finished it, and yeah, a reread wouldn't hurt

freedomnonfighter
22-09-2007, 09:13 PM
Just picked up Eckhart Tolle's A New Earth last night... can't wait to get started :D

lilly555
23-09-2007, 04:37 AM
The last book that I read was David Icke's book Infinate Love is the Only Truth Everthing Else is Illusion. Loved it! Part of it tripped me out. Like a drug. :)

amercury
23-09-2007, 04:53 AM
I read about 5 books at a time...another gemini.
I just finished "The Cosmic Serpent" by Jeremy Narby and "Taking the Quantum Leap" by Fred Alan Wolf. I am still reading "Pedagogy of the Oppressed" by Paulo Freire, "Great Harry" about Henry VIII, and "Tales from the Time Loop" by you know who.

Someone else on this thread mentioned "The Secret Life of Plants", I read that not long ago...really good.

This is a great thread...lots of leads for new books to read!

tinmenace
23-09-2007, 06:08 AM
The last book that I read was David Icke's book Infinate Love is the Only Truth Everthing Else is Illusion. Loved it! Part of it tripped me out. Like a drug. :)

Don't you just love that? I often have the same reaction when I read David's stuff, including the newsletters...oh, and also when I watch his video-casts.

Total resonance. I love David! :)

freedomnonfighter
23-09-2007, 06:20 AM
Tin that is an AWESOME avatar...beautiful

adimon
23-09-2007, 06:53 AM
Tin that is an AWESOME avatar...beautiful

"VALIS" by Philip K. Dick - I think people on this forum would love it, even the ones that don't love me ;)

montag
23-09-2007, 10:06 AM
Reread Gods of Eden
I'm reading that now, halfway through.. Anyone else read this?

montag
23-09-2007, 10:09 AM
"VALIS" by Philip K. Dick - I think people on this forum would love it, even the ones that don't love me ;)
I love you adimon and I also love PKD.. Thanks for the recommendation.. :)

mr jones
24-09-2007, 09:39 PM
i read Quest Magic by Amado Crowley :D

jinjo5
24-09-2007, 10:13 PM
...1984...

gorgeousbutterfly
25-09-2007, 09:29 AM
Marilyn Monroe Returns: the healing of a soul

i'm trying to get through the biggest secret by david icke .

mercuryrapids
25-09-2007, 11:10 AM
The Alien Chronicles by Matthew Hurley (still reading it, actually :) )

The last one I finished was Witness to Roswell by Don Schmitt and Thomas Carey

turquoisefyre
26-09-2007, 02:58 PM
The Witches of Chiswick by Robert Rankin.

only for consp:Diracy nuts!!

chattanova
26-09-2007, 04:03 PM
The Alien Chronicles by Matthew Hurley (still reading it, actually :) )

The last one I finished was Witness to Roswell by Don Schmitt and Thomas Carey

I ordered 'Alien Chronicles' sometime in June. Still it haven't come :mad::confused:
I'm really looking forward for that one.

eternal_spirit
26-09-2007, 04:11 PM
Mac Millan's Encyclopedia, it's massive and I wouldn't read it all. But comes in handy for finding out bits and pieces of info and the meanings of words etc.

The Internet keeps me away from books.

A friend gave me a copy of The men Who Star At Goats by Jon Ronson. I've already come across much of what's contained in the book on the Internet.

Is it worth a read:confused:

amercury
27-09-2007, 05:06 AM
I posted on this thread a few days ago about some books I have been reading. I wanted to expand on one of them, but had to leave my post at the computer so to speak....so now I am back.
The book is "Pedagogy of the Oppressed" by Paulo Freire. It is a book I am reading for grad school mostly about third world and latin america, but the whole time I have been reading it, I can't help but apply it more globally and think of the illuminati.
I personally believe the illuminati to be of the same species as myself (I am not a reptilian), and I'm not dissing anyone's beliefs, the reptilian thing is just not a reality for me right now. Anyone who share's my belief might find this book interesting.
It really clarifies a lot about the psychology and consciousness of the oppressors (illuminati). It is quite complex to summarize, so to keep it brief I will just give some quotes from the book.

THEM
"For the oppressors, "human beings" refers only to themselves; other people are "things"

"The oppressor consciousness tends to transform everything surrounding it into an object of its domination. The earth, property, production, the creations of people, people themselves, time--everything is reduced to the staus of objects at its disposal"

"This tendency of the oppressor consciousness to "in-animate" everything and everyone it encounters, in its eagerness to posssess, unquestionably corresponds with a tendency to sadism"

"More and more, the oppressors are using science and technology as unquestionable powerful instruments for their purpose: the maintenance of the oppressive order through manipulation and repression. The oppressed, as objects, as "things" have no purposes except those their oppressors prescribe for them"

"...strictly materialistic concept of existence, to be is to have"

US
"One of the gravest obstacles to the achievement of liberation is that oppressive reality absorbs those within it and thereby acts to submerge human beings' consciousness."

"Consciously or unconsciously, the act of rebellion by the oppressed (an act which is always, or nearly always, as violent as the initial violence of the oppressors) can initiate love."

"As the oppressed, fighting to be human, take away the oppressors' power to dominate and suppress, they restore to the oppressors the humanity they had lost in the exercise of oppression."

"Freedom is acquired by conquest, not by gift...it must be pursued constantly, it is not an ideal located outside of a person rather it is the condition for the quest of human completion"

"Consciousness and world are simultaneous, consciousness neither precedes the world or follows it"


Love is the only answer:)

adimon
27-09-2007, 11:21 AM
I love you adimon and I also love PKD.. Thanks for the recommendation.. :)

Thank you very much. It's his best book by far.

sunyatta60
27-09-2007, 01:09 PM
I am reading these two at the mo, Forbidden Archeology by Michael Cremo and Richard Thompson. And Warped Passages a high level physics book about String theory by Lisa Randall.
Anyone read the Earth Children Series by Jean M. Auell? They are well worth reading and I thoroughly enjoyed them. I also enjoyed Pullman's Dark triology

strider
27-09-2007, 08:52 PM
I've just finished 3 books today.. f**k the ride by dave courtney, amtrak wars book 6 by patrick tilley and the music of time by preston nichols..

mr jones
01-10-2007, 03:50 PM
I've just finished 3 books today.. f**k the ride by dave courtney, amtrak wars book 6 by patrick tilley and the music of time by preston nichols..

what's the dave courtney book like?
i like those true crime books

strider
01-10-2007, 03:55 PM
what's the dave courtney book like?
i like those true crime books

It is actually quite funny, and brutally honest.. He is in love with himself, but it's all a bit tongue in cheek..

Worth a read I suppose and it is written quite well..

sunyatta60
03-10-2007, 01:15 PM
If you like Crime books Norman Parkers Parkhurst Tales is one of the best of that Particular Genre and Roy Shaw's autobiography Pretty Boy was brilliant to.
I know Roy and he is a Diamond!

I am now half way through the Prophet by Gibran

mountain
04-10-2007, 10:23 AM
I just finished a few. Mayan Code by Barbara Hand Clow, Earth by Barbara Marciniak, A Child Called "It" by Dave Pelzer and The Secret Life of Water by Masaru Emoto

All great!

mad as a cat
12-10-2007, 05:36 AM
Just finished '50 Ways To Kill A Slug'(a bit silly I know!).
Browsing 'The Outdoor Survival Manual' by Garth Hattingh.
Re-reading 'The Celestine Prophecy' by James Redfield (with a view to letting my son read it next).
And then, I've got 'The Hollow Earth' by Raymond Bernard and 'Wanderers In The New Forest' by Juliette de Bairacli Levy, lined up.
(Yes,I LOVE reading!
:):):):)

sunyatta60
13-10-2007, 12:49 AM
I just finished reading a Novel called Truth by a Canadian guy called Paul Davies to be honest I think it was more an autobiography. It had some moments but was nothing to get excited about.
I am now reading the first of Homer's books and that is fascinating :)

smartyjones
15-10-2007, 03:44 PM
Slaughterhouse Five Kurt Vonnegut Jr.

deviadah
23-10-2007, 02:11 PM
What is the last book you read?....and what did you think about it?
Good topic and very important... not the topic but reading :D

The Outsider by Colin Wilson

If you feel like an outsider you should read this exposition. It's very good and well researched.

Two thumbs up!

turquoisefyre
23-10-2007, 04:42 PM
miracles by stuart wilde.

beautiful. just beautiful. short & sweet and worth carrying around.

sunyatta60
02-11-2007, 11:36 AM
I am now reading Next by Crichton I love his book must be the scientist in me wanting to get out :)

chattanova
03-11-2007, 08:54 PM
http://img39.picoodle.com/img/img39/6/11/3/f_231440mm_62f784b.jpg

This is 'Icke Hardcore' & a really enjoyable read.

h1s_l0rdsh1p
04-11-2007, 12:13 AM
Book for common info:
Title - Time for Revolution
Author - Antonio Negri

Quite nice if you are a Marxist, or if you enjoy seeing the insights to ideologies you disagree with.

As of now:
....
Corpus .....

Yes, two books, and no.

gorgeousbutterfly
04-11-2007, 04:43 AM
https://www.yogamates.com/catalog/images/DearGod_500h.jpg

father ted
04-11-2007, 07:44 AM
Who here has read any of Swerdlow's books? Last books I've read. Going through 13 cubed at the moment.

sunyatta60
04-11-2007, 12:45 PM
I read God's Gladiators a few years ago I am now reading Mind Control the ultimate revelation by David Shuttleworth.

Reading Maketh the Man
Francis Bacon

chattanova
11-11-2007, 05:54 PM
http://img32.picoodle.com/img/img32/5/11/11/f_51w7JeWsDlLm_a338231.jpg

gorgeousbutterfly
17-11-2007, 04:37 AM
http://img32.picoodle.com/img/img32/5/11/11/f_51w7JeWsDlLm_a338231.jpg

his ideas are CRAZY.

chattanova
17-11-2007, 10:06 AM
his ideas are CRAZY.

Have you read his books too? Its just fear mongering :eek::mad:
And he got some really really bad ideas.
As for the survivors after the pole shift, just those who have something useful like history books!:rolleyes: and other stuff will get help and can join the gang.
The rest, those who don't have anything won't be included and will have to make it for themselves and not welcome into the rebuilding!
No if everybody will pass on to the 4th dimension, Im coming too.
I won't be left back here with that nutter :o:rolleyes: Screw that book!

Official website of Patrick Geryl http://www.howtosurvive2012.com/

gorgeousbutterfly
18-11-2007, 08:57 AM
Have you read his books too? Its just fear mongering :eek::mad:
And he got some really really bad ideas.
As for the survivors after the pole shift, just those who have something useful like history books!:rolleyes: and other stuff will get help and can join the gang.
The rest, those who don't have anything won't be included and will have to make it for themselves and not welcome into the rebuilding!
No if everybody will pass on to the 4th dimension, Im coming too.
I won't be left back here with that nutter :o:rolleyes: Screw that book!

Official website of Patrick Geryl http://www.howtosurvive2012.com/

(http://www.howtosurvive2012.com/)

LMAO. yes i've read his other book. he's a nutter. you said everything perfectly. he is definalty a fear monger or whatever lol.

hagbard_celine
18-11-2007, 03:22 PM
Who here has read any of Swerdlow's books? Last books I've read. Going through 13 cubed at the moment.

True Blood- Blue Blood is one of the best books I've ever read.

lemonique
19-11-2007, 05:42 AM
'The Outlook for Homo Sapiens' by H.G. Wells

Very revealing NWO stuff by yet another shill.

Lemonique

father ted
19-11-2007, 08:21 AM
True Blood- Blue Blood is one of the best books I've ever read.

That's my favourite so far. 13 cubed and his sexuality book are not far behind. Who "knew" that we have a second artificial moon behind the other one:eek: And that there are so many human species.

sunyatta60
19-11-2007, 08:37 AM
How to know God by Deepak Chopra one of my favourite authors who makes a lot of sense!

turquoisefyre
25-11-2007, 02:49 PM
People of the Lie: Hope for Healing Human Evil

by M. Scott Peck


wow. to me this book explained alot, even if it is very simple. at least for me.

turquoisefyre
25-11-2007, 03:03 PM
How to know God by Deepak Chopra one of my favourite authors who makes a lot of sense!


i've read it. very good. also i've come across this Larry King Live transcript. i remember watching it 7 years ago, and i got the book about a year later

Larry King Live
Deepak Chopra Discusses `How to Know God'

http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0005/17/lkl.00.html

freedomnonfighter
26-11-2007, 01:44 AM
Last three books I recently read:

A New Earth by Eckhart Tolle - one of the best books I've ever read.. definitely one to give my parents.

Practicing The Power of Now by Tolle


'Dear God! What's Happening To Us?' by Lynn Grabhorn:

Was an interesting read to say the most. Through the only thing that resonated with me/my intuition was her sincerity and care for all that is... the rest was just HER reality.

Currently reading Think On These Things by Jiddu Krishnamurti, and waiting on Icke's new book :)

sunyatta60
26-11-2007, 02:54 PM
The Mayan Code by Barbara Hand Clow I enjoyed the book the way she lamblasted the Necons and called Bush and his cronies The Bushites. I don't go along with her view on evolution.

sunyatta60
27-11-2007, 08:23 AM
I am now reading Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose anyone else read it? Maybe that is where Dan Brown got his inspiration from. Sometime ago I read Eco's other book Foucault's pendulum which was pretty good.
Thanks to turquoisefyre for the Chopra transcript I suppose I am on level 5 in that I believe I am Co-creating my experience with God and the more Consciousness you bring to the table the easier it is to manifest the things you want in life. It does work for me the key is letting go and trusting in the process.

A good book is the life blood for a great Spirit.
John Milton

nuit
27-11-2007, 02:40 PM
Aleister Crowley and the Golden Dawn - Anon

hagbard_celine
27-11-2007, 05:47 PM
A Magick Life by Martin Booth- a biography of Aleister Crowley

sunyatta60
28-11-2007, 01:11 PM
Crowley was a fantastic chess player and might have been a world champion had he stuck with the game.

http://www.chessville.com/misc/History/PastPawns/CrowleyVsWhitaker1916Rediscovered.htm

hagbard_celine
28-11-2007, 02:03 PM
Crowley was a fantastic chess player and might have been a world champion had he stuck with the game.

http://www.chessville.com/misc/History/PastPawns/CrowleyVsWhitaker1916Rediscovered.htm

Yes, he was an expert at many things. He was one of the world's best rock-climbers as well. He almost made it to the top of K2 in the 1900's, years before it was eventually conquered, personally fincancing the mission. He could even have scaled Everest before Hillary if he hadn't blown all his money.

nuit
29-11-2007, 09:34 AM
i am going to start reading gemetria - aleister crowley today, but if for any reason i feel too unintellectual to get into the frame of mind needed to work my way through it then i am gonna read Gnostic Prayer - samuel weir (i think that is his name, cannot be bothered to go upstairs and check at the moment *will edit if necessary*:))

gorgeousbutterfly
29-11-2007, 11:03 PM
Crowley was a fantastic chess player and might have been a world champion had he stuck with the game.

http://www.chessville.com/misc/History/PastPawns/CrowleyVsWhitaker1916Rediscovered.htm

yes and that is all his good at.

nuit
29-11-2007, 11:31 PM
yes and that is all his good at.


oh you judge so easily :D he was actually a highly intelligent man who excelled at many things

strider
29-11-2007, 11:40 PM
yes and that is all his good at.

Well after reading a good bit about Crowley myself, and a few of his books, I can say that is not the case.. He might have gone down a path that a lot of us would not choose, but was a genius in his own right..

O.k. he was a conceited cock, but I can't take his talents and bravery away from him...

sunyatta60
30-11-2007, 09:19 AM
A Magick Life by Martin Booth- a biography of Aleister Crowley

Hi HC
The other week the missus dragged me around the shops and being a biblophile I always run off into the nearest bookshop he he he anyways I was in this shop surrounded by books I was looking for two in particular. Satanic Verses and Finnigan's Wake when I came across one by Robert Anton Wilson which he wrote in conjunction with Robert Shea and it is called The Illuminatus Triology. I remembered something you had posted about RAW and bought the book. It is now on my list of books to read I have a shelf full of them it is 800 plus pages and is a Sc-fi novel with plenty of Truth in it me thinks.

nuit
30-11-2007, 09:47 AM
Robert Anton Wilson is a very influential author and speaker, i think someone put some youtube vids up in here about him at some point. Very interesting viewing

sunyatta60
30-11-2007, 11:29 AM
Hi Nuit
I think I read somewhere that he was mixed up with the illuminatie I used to subscribe to a mag called The X Factor they were similar to Nexus and they did an interesting interview with him.
Anyway are u now fully recovered from your accident, I hope you are well on the road to recovery because we are living in exciting times and like Chopra said recently on his blog if we are the generation that is to witness the end of the universe then we are indeed the most fortunate :)

hagbard_celine
30-11-2007, 12:06 PM
Hi HC
The other week the missus dragged me around the shops and being a biblophile I always run off into the nearest bookshop he he he anyways I was in this shop surrounded by books I was looking for two in particular. Satanic Verses and Finnigan's Wake when I came across one by Robert Anton Wilson which he wrote in conjunction with Robert Shea and it is called The Illuminatus Triology. I remembered something you had posted about RAW and bought the book. It is now on my list of books to read I have a shelf full of them it is 800 plus pages and is a Sc-fi novel with plenty of Truth in it me thinks.

It's easily the best novel I've ever read!:) Hope you enjoy it as much as i did.

You've no doubt noticed that my username is from that book.

hagbard_celine
30-11-2007, 12:06 PM
Robert Anton Wilson is a very influential author and speaker, i think someone put some youtube vids up in here about him at some point. Very interesting viewing

His live lectures are an absolute joy to watch.:)

hagbard_celine
30-11-2007, 12:09 PM
Hi Nuit
I think I read somewhere that he was mixed up with the illuminatie I used to subscribe to a mag called The X Factor they were similar to Nexus and they did an interesting interview with him.
Anyway are u now fully recovered from your accident, I hope you are well on the road to recovery because we are living in exciting times and like Chopra said recently on his blog if we are the generation that is to witness the end of the universe then we are indeed the most fortunate :)

Yeah, I remember that magazine. It only ran for a few months about 15 years ago, but it was very good. It was TV advertized and I got it from my local newsagent. It introduced conspiracy theories in a very simple way to people new to the subject. It was far less extensive than Nexus, but it made Nexus easier to get into when i started reading it a few years alter.

nuit
30-11-2007, 02:12 PM
Hi Nuit

Anyway are u now fully recovered from your accident, I hope you are well on the road to recovery because we are living in exciting times and like Chopra said recently on his blog if we are the generation that is to witness the end of the universe then we are indeed the most fortunate :)

hi sunyatta :)
Thank you for your well wishes, i still find myself in incredible pain, but bieng home (well home as i can be, if you call staying with my sister and her husband home) is the best therapy as i can get.I will get there eventually, again thank you so much for your kind thoughts

nuit
30-11-2007, 02:13 PM
His live lectures are an absolute joy to watch.:)

agreed very inciteful, and if you appreciate that kind of thing, enlightening also :D

adimon
30-11-2007, 03:19 PM
Hi HC
The other week the missus dragged me around the shops and being a biblophile I always run off into the nearest bookshop he he he anyways I was in this shop surrounded by books I was looking for two in particular. Satanic Verses and Finnigan's Wake when I came across one by Robert Anton Wilson which he wrote in conjunction with Robert Shea and it is called The Illuminatus Triology. I remembered something you had posted about RAW and bought the book. It is now on my list of books to read I have a shelf full of them it is 800 plus pages and is a Sc-fi novel with plenty of Truth in it me thinks.

Good choices mate. You will have excellent fun with Illuminatus! Trilogy (the exclamation mark is essential!) and hard but infinitely rewarding work with Finnegan's Wake. Finnegan's Wake is by far the most incredible and experimental work of fiction ever written. Took me nearly ten years to read, mind.

It's easily the best novel I've ever read!:) Hope you enjoy it as much as i did.

You've no doubt noticed that my username is from that book.

Shit! There was me thinking you WERE R.A.W. !!! I feel deflated! :D :p

adimon
30-11-2007, 03:20 PM
``Very nice,'' I said. ``But why did you bring me up here?''
``It's time for you to see the fnords,'' he replied.
Then I woke up in bed and it was the next morning. I made breakfast in a pretty nasty mood, wondering if I'd seen the fnords, whatever the hell they were, in the hours he had blacked out, or if I would see them as soon as I went out into the street. I had some pretty gruesome ideas about them, I must admit. Creatures with three eyes and tentacles, survivors from Atlantis, who walked among us, invisible due to some form of mind shield, and did hideous work for the Illuminati. It was unnerving to contemplate, and I finally gave in to my fears and peeked out the window, thinking it might be better to see them from a distance first. Nothing. Just ordinary sleepy people, heading for their busses and subways. That calmed me a little, so I set out the toast and coffee and fetched the New York Times from the hallway. I turned the radio to WBAI and caught some good Vivaldi, sat down, grabbed a piece of toast and started skimming the first page.
Then I saw the fnords.
The feature story involved another of the endless squabbles between Russia and the U.S. in the UN General Assembly, and after each direct quote from the Russian delegate I read a quite distinct ``Fnord!'' The second lead was about a debate in congress on getting the troops out of costa Rica; every argument presented by Senator Bacon was followed by another ``Fnord!'' At the bottom of the page was a Times depth-type study of the growing pollution problem and the increasing use of gas masks among New Yorkers; the most distressing chemical facts were interpolated with more ``Fnords.''
Suddenly I saw Hagbard's eyes burning into me and heard his voice: ``Your heart will remain calm. Your adrenalin gland will remain calm. Calm, all-over calm. You will not panic. you will look at the fnord and see the it. You will not evade it or black it out. you will stay calm and face it.'' And further back, way back: my first-grade teacher writing FNORD on the blackboard, while a wheel with a spiral design turned and turned on his desk, turned and turned, and his voice droned on, IF YOU DON'T SEE THE FNORD IT CAN'T EAT YOU, DON'T SEE THE FNORD, DON'T SEE THE FNORD . . .
I looked back at the paper and still saw the fnords. This was one step beyond Pavlov, I realized. The first conditioned reflex was to experience the panic reaction (the activation syndrome, it's technically called) whenever encountering the word ``fnord.'' The second conditioned reflex was to black out what happened, including the word itself, and just to feel a general low-grade emergency without knowing why. And the third step, of course, was to attribute this anxiety to the news stories, which were bad enough in themselves anyway. Of course, the essence of control is fear. The fnords produced a whole population walking around in chronic low-grade emergency, tormented by ulcers, dizzy spells, nightmares, heart palpitations and all the other symptoms of too much adrenalin. All my left-wing arrogance and contempt for my countrymen melted, and I felt a genuine pity. No wonder the poor bastards believe anything they're told, walk through pollution and overcrowding without complaining, watch their son hauled off to endless wars and butchered, never protest, never fight back, never show much happiness or eroticism or curiosity or normal human emotion, live with perpetual tunnel vision, walk past a slum without seeing either the human misery it contains or the potential threat it poses to their security . . .
Then I got a hunch, and turned quickly to the advertisements. it was as I expected: no fnords. That was part of the gimmick, too: only in consumption, endless consumption, could they escape the amorphous threat of the invisible fnords. I kept thinking about it on my way to the office. If I pointed out a fnord to somebody who hadn't been deconditioned, as Hagbard deconditioned me, what would he or she say? They'd probably read the word before or after it. ``No this word,'' I'd say. And they would again read an adjacent word. But would their panic level rise as the threat came closer to consciousness? I preferred not to try the experiment; it might have ended with a psychotic fugue in the subject. The conditioning, after all, went back to grade school. No wonder we all hate those teachers so much: we have a dim, masked memory of what they've done to us in converting us into good and faithful servants for the Illuminati.

sunyatta60
30-11-2007, 09:44 PM
HI HC
The X Factor ran for 3 years and I collected everyone of them I used to work with a former England football manager LOL and I wanted to show his team (at club level) what the mind was capable of. So I took in some of those mags where they had photo's of Suffis in trance with large bladed knives buried deep in the head. I showed the boss and he winced and said do your think you should show the boys. I said definately because it will give them that mental toughness that people from my sport have. I am an ex pro fighter but that is another story.
Nuit would do well to remember that all pain is in the mind, I know some people think that it is a glib thing to say but seriously if that were not true people who have had amputations would not experience pain in a limb that is no longer there.
Adi ex Squaddies like you and me often get sterotyped just like ex fighters I suppose. I have a very eceletic reading taste I suppose and my house is full of books. I have not read Illuminatius! Yet and I am speed reading through my books because I have books on the shelf that I bought 3 or 5 years ago that I am still waiting to get around to reading.
The current one in The name of the Rose is a novel set in the 14th century where a load of monks get bumped off in a monastry I suppose the author is doing a good job of exposing how bad the Catholic church really was and still is he makes numerous references to all the infighting and the disgraceful way people were branded heretics and murdered by the church.
I just love reading novels like that and novels like the ones that Crichton writes which are full of the wonders of science whilst attacking those mad scientists who are hell bent on serving their political masters.

adimon
30-11-2007, 09:49 PM
Adi ex Squaddies like you and me often get sterotyped just like ex fighters I suppose. I have a very eceletic reading taste I suppose and my house is full of books. I have not read Illuminatius! Yet and I am speed reading through my books because I have books on the shelf that I bought 3 or 5 years ago that I am still waiting to get around to reading.
The current one in The name of the Rose is a novel set in the 14th century where a load of monks get bumped off in a monastry I suppose the author is doing a good job of exposing how bad the Catholic church really was and still is he makes numerous references to all the infighting and the disgraceful way people were branded heretics and murdered by the church.
I just love reading novels like that and novels like the ones that Crichton writes which are full of the wonders of science whilst attacking those mad scientists who are hell bent on serving their political masters.

I agree we get stereotyped - but what provoked you to say it? :)

I was a rupert anyway, not a squaddie, but I thank you for your sentiment anyway.

The Name of the Rose is another awesome book. I also love Crichton. I did enjoy watching JP, but would have liked to have seen a version a bit more faithful to the book, with all the chaos theory added!

Just wait til you get stuck into Finnegan's Wake mate, you'll love it! :D

sunyatta60
30-11-2007, 09:59 PM
I agree we get stereotyped - but what provoked you to say it? :)

I was a rupert anyway, not a squaddie, but I thank you for your sentiment anyway.

The Name of the Rose is another awesome book. I also love Crichton. I did enjoy watching JP, but would have liked to have seen a version a bit more faithful to the book, with all the chaos theory added!

Just wait til you get stuck into Finnegan's Wake mate, you'll love it! :D

I just never got the impression that you was much of a reader ;)

But seriously that is the public perception the boys in my old regiment not only read widely they are all now top selling authors, they do say we all have a book in us mine is a a best seller waiting to get out. It would read like a whose who of the famous, infamous etc LOL
I have been trying to track that book down in a charity shop but will probably get it from Amazon at Christmas. I am going to buy all my books from American Amazon this year because it will be a lot cheaper than the UK site and they told me I can do that.
I am working with children in some of the top public schools here in the south east I would hate to see any of them take a commision I wonder what you and others think.

nuit
30-11-2007, 10:07 PM
I just never got the impression that you was much of a reader ;)

But seriously that is the public perception the boys in my old regiment not only read widely they are all now top selling authors, they do say we all have a book in us mine is a a best seller waiting to get out. It would read like a whose who of the famous, infamous etc LOL
I have been trying to track that book down in a charity shop but will probably get it from Amazon at Christmas. I am going to buy all my books from American Amazon this year because it will be a lot cheaper than the UK site and they told me I can do that.
I am working with children in some of the top public schools here in the south east I would hate to see any of them take a commision I wonder what you and others think.



you need to get yourself to some book sales they are held in churches and villages halls all over the place, i have just been ripped off badly by a bookseller on amazon.com for a collection of books so i do not recommend them at present, although that is just me i guess a lot of people have been happy with the service off there. My grievance was that it was for an amount that was not to be laughed at and amazon are not interested in helping at all

adimon
30-11-2007, 10:08 PM
I just never got the impression that you was much of a reader ;)

I am working with children in some of the top public schools here in the south east I would hate to see any of them take a commision I wonder what you and others think.

LOL :D I've read probably on average 1 or 2 books a week since I was 4 or 5. I'd be happy to recommend some others if you'd like. Tell me what your interests are, I've read most kinds of stuff.

On the other subject, my view is that its really only worth taking a commission if you want Majority or above. It's not a fantastic career for 3-5 years. The better jobs come later. As you may agree with me, Captains are probably the moodiest bods around. They either know they're out soon and don't give a shit, or they're 'Army barmy' and want that crown on their shoulder like its oxygen.

Mind you, I know a fair few Colonels who are cool guys.

I still have utmost respect for the Army and many friends, both ruperts and toms, mainly teeth arms but some ICorps, Sigs, RLC etc

klinker
01-12-2007, 12:05 AM
Just finished reading the Biggest Secret again. I've normally got around six books on the go but my present regular read this week is The best democracy money can buy - Greg Palast.

sunyatta60
01-12-2007, 10:11 PM
you need to get yourself to some book sales they are held in churches and villages halls all over the place, i have just been ripped off badly by a bookseller on amazon.com for a collection of books so i do not recommend them at present, although that is just me i guess a lot of people have been happy with the service off there. My grievance was that it was for an amount that was not to be laughed at and amazon are not interested in helping at all

Hi Nuit
I have not had any bad experience with Amazon and I once bought The Book of Enoch on e-bay for $12.50 and I was billed $1250 LOL
Luckily for me the seller was honest and refunded me the money the funny thing about that was she had my Wife's full name :)
I knew that in America you had the Village people but I never knew they had villages :confused:

gorgeousbutterfly
01-12-2007, 11:30 PM
oh you judge so easily :D he was actually a highly intelligent man who excelled at many things


http://www.davidicke.com/forum/showthread.php?t=3052&highlight=crowley

i wouldn't trust what you read from him at all. intelligent in a bad way.

hagbard_celine
02-12-2007, 01:01 PM
Shit! There was me thinking you WERE R.A.W. !!! I feel deflated! :D :p


http://img254.imageshack.us/img254/6050/hagbardceleneantonwilshr1.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
By porterboy (http://profile.imageshack.us/user/porterboy)
(Picture by Dondaz)

There is a resemblance I suppose! :D

mister lister
07-12-2007, 07:21 PM
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/4183NYXJ0VL._AA240_.jpg

freedomnonfighter
07-12-2007, 10:34 PM
http://www.santosha.com/ProductImages/books/thinkon-m.jpg http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41153cegFKL._SL150_.jpg

http://www.seekerbooks.com/image/skub/9781590302033b.jpg

Now to read the new Icke book :cool:

thelyran
12-12-2007, 11:28 PM
Last book that I read...back in 2002....to assist me with my ordeal,was
"Battling Dark Forces",written back in 68-69....I love,as he wrote then....
"I believe,not in the distant future,that an extra-terrestrial race will seek dominion over the Earth,attracted by the human corruption...etc"
...I don't know,if he is saying they're already here but hiding in their closets....or they are coming.
Very few writers have ever displayed their interconnectedness with the truth...

91181
13-12-2007, 12:17 AM
Iv just finished reading Vattican assasins 2nd edition, a great read , and infinitie love is the only truth every thing else is illusion for the 20th time :D



Currently reading Junky by william s. burroughs

ichi wa zen
16-12-2007, 08:01 PM
I have just finished reading: Playboy 2007 Super Christmas Special.

No, really, last book ive read was The Atlantis Encyclopedia.

2013
16-12-2007, 08:22 PM
http://www.amazon.com/Black-Elk-Speaks-Being-Oglala/dp/0803283598
Black Elk speaks very good historical account fromthe horses mouth or should that be buffalo:D

chattanova
24-12-2007, 12:59 PM
http://img03.picoodle.com/img/img03/5/12/24/f_517M45K9E6Lm_ad6b300.jpg

A classic!

paganus
04-01-2008, 11:06 AM
the last book i read was 'join me' by danny wallace.hilarious!:D

cheeney1
04-01-2008, 12:43 PM
The Last Book I Read Was Hostage To the Devil By Malachi Martin

wormhole
04-01-2008, 04:35 PM
Surfing the Himalayas

http://www.himalaya.com/


i found this one in a charity shop :)

anyone else read it ?

nickatnoon61
06-01-2008, 10:29 AM
I just finished a few. Mayan Code by Barbara Hand Clow, Earth by Barbara Marciniak, A Child Called "It" by Dave Pelzer and The Secret Life of Water by Masaru Emoto

All great! Hi mountain, I also have 2 of Emoto's books! Great minds think alike,eh? :)

mariag
06-01-2008, 10:41 AM
The Biggets secret - David Icke

cheeney1
06-01-2008, 10:51 AM
The Biggets secret - David Icke

Good Choice Its One Of Mine Also, And Its One Of David Ickes Best:)

mariag
06-01-2008, 10:58 AM
Good Choice Its One Of Mine Also, And Its One Of David Ickes Best:)
Yes It is . I just ordered his last book , I will enjoy reading it :)

cheeney1
06-01-2008, 11:02 AM
Yes It is . I just ordered his last book , I will enjoy reading it :)

I am Too, I Have Ordered It From The States,Cause Its Very Hard To Buy These Books Here

mariag
07-01-2008, 10:19 PM
I am Too, I Have Ordered It From The States,Cause Its Very Hard To Buy These Books Here
:):):D

fiery_truth
12-01-2008, 12:18 AM
The last book I read was David Icke's new one and it is the best of Davids books that Ive read :)

mariag
12-01-2008, 12:21 AM
It just arrived I will start reading it tonight :D

cheeney1
12-01-2008, 12:50 AM
It just arrived I will start reading it tonight :D

Mine Hasn't Yet, Still Waiting:rolleyes::rolleyes:

shodan
19-01-2008, 07:43 AM
I just finished American Scream - The Bill Hicks story.

Absolutely fantastic! a man who believed in the soul, who worked out the agenda through his own experiences trying to get his message out via the mainstream media, a man who realised the tv networks want to keep the masses dumb and unconnected. I cried a lot towards the end of the book, when it was describing the last months of Hicks short life, how scared he was at first, then how nothing was about himself but about making it easier for everyone around him that he loved. A true hero of our times, and a major contributor to the awakening we are experiencing now. When you read about people like Hicks, you forget about your own problems and become inspired to help save humanity, thoroughly recommended.

...no wonder there's an ever-growing sense of disenfranchisement, apathy and cynicism in our country when we're all tuned into the real drug of the country - television - brought to us by an elite class of 'unique' and 'special' people who find the dirty herd beneath contempt, and only there really to buy the useless products created to fill the imaginary 'wants' television really hawks between hours of puerile programming. Every few years, they cart out the old argument regarding television's role in our society. As usual, the pose us divided and keep the problem unresolved, then its back to 'business as usual'. The herd has been pacified by our charade of concern as we pose the two most idiotic questions imaginable: 'Is TV becoming too violent?' and 'Is TV becoming too promiscuous?' - The answer my friends, is this - TV is too stupid

thomascovenant
26-01-2008, 04:18 AM
Just about to finish "red dust" by Ma Jian.
A poet, painter and photographer, Ma Jian is suspected of "spiritual pollution" by the communist party and decides to travel around China.
I`m not selling it well but fuck off, I didn`t write it did I?
BTW its really rather good.
Also re-reading Cildren of the Matrix and In Xanadu by William Dalrymple.

sunyatta60
30-01-2008, 12:24 PM
Disclosure by Michael Crichton I really enjoy his books.

greenleaf
30-01-2008, 05:10 PM
"Who Are The Illuminati" by Lindsay Porter.
(C & B books ISBN 1-84340-289-0)

A good book for people like me (eneducated) who occasionally find it hard taking in all the info in one chunk.

joyful
30-01-2008, 09:28 PM
I am currently reading The Synagogue of Satan (http://www.thesynagogueofsatan.com/) by Andrew Carrington Hitchcock, an ex bobby who has been researching the seret zionist conspiracy for years.

http://img125.imageshack.us/img125/7619/synagogueofsatanaz9.jpg

The book is chronology of jewish political crimes from the last 500 years. You can read excerpts on he French Connection:

http://iamthewitness.com/books/Andrew.Carrington.Hitchcock/

Andrew Carrington Hitchcock talking about the history of zionist conspiracy:
http://iamthewitness.com/audio/Andrew.Carrington.Hitchcock/TFC.2008.01.09.Wed.Hitchkock.1of3.mp3
http://iamthewitness.com/audio/Andrew.Carrington.Hitchcock/TFC.2008.01.09.Wed.Hitchkock.2of3.mp3
http://iamthewitness.com/audio/Andrew.Carrington.Hitchcock/TFC.2008.01.09.Wed.Hitchkock.3of3.mp3

freedomnonfighter
31-01-2008, 08:25 AM
http://myhero.com/ReadingRoom/books/einstein3.jpg

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41CJQ47TD6L._AA240_.jpg

http://home.wxs.nl/%7Ebrouw724/images/Huxley4.jpg

http://www.anus.com/zine/books/johann_wolfgang_von_goethe-the_sorrows_of_young_werther.jpg

cheeney1
31-01-2008, 10:43 AM
The Biggets secret - David Icke

Mine still has not Arrived Yet I think The CiAL Qaeda Or The NSA Are Reading it:mad::mad::mad::mad:

freedomnonfighter
10-02-2008, 07:14 PM
http://www.gothic.hu/images/konyv/goethe.jpg

http://cdn.harpercollins.com/harperimages/isbn/large/9/9780062506139.jpg

dj melkior
10-02-2008, 09:17 PM
http://i131.photobucket.com/albums/p289/tomakamelkior/Supernatural.jpg

I recommend this book to anyone who has had an unexplained spirit / UFO / fairy encounter, Graham has some interesting theories on this phenomenon. If you have found yourself asking "who are we and where do we come from", then this book is for you.


This book has inspired me to study shamanism in all different corners of the globe. My first expedition will been to the Amazon rainforest where I'll partake in some ayahuasca sessions.

2013
11-02-2008, 01:12 AM
Paul doherty trilogy set in egypt during the reign of akenhaten and based supposedly on the memiors of the chief of police of the time Mahu so therefore an accurate description conatained within the story line? :D
An interesting read whatever .
http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/d/p-c-doherty/evil-spirit-out-of-west.htm

Egyptian Mysteries
1. An Evil Spirit Out of the West (2003)
2. The Season of the Hyaena (2005)
3. The Year of the Cobra (2006)

sunyatta60
11-02-2008, 02:06 PM
NEXT by Michael Crichton

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Next-Michael-Crichton/dp/0007241003/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1202735098&sr=1-1

lumukanda
11-02-2008, 05:36 PM
john fowles' 'the magus'

chattanova
11-02-2008, 08:27 PM
http://img29.picoodle.com/img/img29/4/2/11/f_51F6GAwcRmLm_9a77d80.jpg

Another great read!

danucrom
12-02-2008, 03:55 AM
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/417HaIi7AJL._SS500_.jpg

adimon
12-02-2008, 04:26 AM
john fowles' 'the magus'

That's one of the best books ever written. What did you make of it Lumukanda? :)

nessa felagund
12-02-2008, 02:01 PM
Rockall by Ben Emlyn-Jones (hagbard celine)

kweli
12-02-2008, 02:13 PM
Brave New World - Aldous Huxley.

Read this many years ago but It didn't have the same impact as this time round. This book, absolutely chilled me to the bone! :eek:


Web of Deceit - Britain's Real Role in the World - Mark Curtis - A real eye opener

comawhite015
12-02-2008, 02:22 PM
http://www.henshinonline.com/images/ef_ring_novel.jpg

Gorgeous.

chandrakavi
12-02-2008, 06:57 PM
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/417HaIi7AJL._SS500_.jpg


I heard, from Alex Jones, that H.G. WELLS was a Mason, was the first one to write a
book titled THE NEW WORLD ORDER(you can find that book in internet, google it) around 1930, HE IS BETTER KNOWN by his fiction
books, although he wrote more non-fiction books. It has been said that before dying he
said that a terrible thing would occur, that we would all end up with electrical things in our
brains, and that it was wrong. Many artists have been used by the Illuminati, good ones.
Haven't read this book, i will, but will be aware while doing so.
Thanks for the recomendation anyway, Danucrom. Best to you.

lumukanda
12-02-2008, 07:05 PM
That's one of the best books ever written. What did you make of it Lumukanda? :)

i read it years ago, and what i found so amazing was that after a while you start feeling that all the characters are actually all colluding to fuck with you (this is theme he visited later with Manstissa, another great book by fowles), but i was very young, and now i'm about 3/4's of the way with the 'director's cut' of the book, the one he released a few years ago, the way he wanted it, and i'm seeing whole new dimensions to the book i never saw before.
but you're right, it is hands down one of the best books i have ever read.

danucrom
12-02-2008, 07:22 PM
I heard, from Alex Jones, that H.G. WELLS was a Mason, was the first one to write a
book titled THE NEW WORLD ORDER(you can find that book in internet, google it) around 1930, HE IS BETTER KNOWN by his fiction
books, although he wrote more non-fiction books. It has been said that before dying he
said that a terrible thing would occur, that we would all end up with electrical things in our
brains, and that it was wrong. Many artists have been used by the Illuminati, good ones.
Haven't read this book, i will, but will be aware while doing so.
Thanks for the recomendation anyway, Danucrom. Best to you.

Of course he was a mason (most famous authors are) , I know that . That said, it is well worth reading his books because a lot of what is going on today is outlined in them in great detail, he was in the know just like Aldous Huxley, Manley P Hall, Francis Bacon, and many others. They are very legalistic so they always tell us what is going to happen before it happens, it is not a secret.

sunyatta60
13-02-2008, 02:20 PM
Just finished To kill a Mocking bird and now am moving onto James Herbert starting with The Fog.

lookfar
13-02-2008, 02:40 PM
Psychic Warrior by David Morehouse. It was about remote viewing & the CIA's use of it back in the 80/90's - found it very interesting :)

hagbard_celine
13-02-2008, 03:31 PM
http://i131.photobucket.com/albums/p289/tomakamelkior/Supernatural.jpg

I recommend this book to anyone who has had an unexplained spirit / UFO / fairy encounter, Graham has some interesting theories on this phenomenon. If you have found yourself asking "who are we and where do we come from", then this book is for you.


This book has inspired me to study shamanism in all different corners of the globe. My first expedition will been to the Amazon rainforest where I'll partake in some ayahuasca sessions.

I've read this. It's really good:).

2013
13-02-2008, 07:50 PM
Of course he was a mason (most famous authors are) , I know that . That said, it is well worth reading his books because a lot of what is going on today is outlined in them in great detail, he was in the know just like Aldous Huxley, Manley P Hall, Francis Bacon, and many others. They are very legalistic so they always tell us what is going to happen before it happens, it is not a secret.
H.G wells born 21 September, 1866 makes hi ma virgo the chemical symbol for mercury the ruler of virgo is H.G ! The ydont write novles so much as blue prints words have power as wellas imagination they SPELL everything out to imprint it in this dimension beforehand :D

http://www.crystalinks.com/wells.html
H. G. Wells was torn between 2 visions...one of salvation and one of doom. He was so obsessed with the future he invented a time machine to take him there.

Writing at the end of the last century he pioneer a new kind of fiction, science fiction.

He forecast the 20th century so vividly and accurately he became known as "The Man Who Invented Tomorrow". He saw super highways, overcrowded cities, computers, video cassette players to see novels come to life, televisions to tell the news, tanks used in wars, military use of airplanes, and bombing of cities. In 1911 he forecast a new type of weapon, an atomic weapon, the atomic bomb. He saw them out of control. He saw the bombs made of uranium and would destroy cities.

He said that if humanity did not change it would destroy itself.

His final vision in 1933 was of an apocalyptic world war. This would be the end of humanity of all of the cities.

He prophecized a new consciousness would emerge spear headed by a visionary elite that would take control of the weapons of war and create a world state. They could pacify and lead the people to a new world.

By the middle of the 21st century he envisioned a peaceful world liberated from old hatreds and adorned with scientific marvels.

His greatest vision was time travel. Almost 100 years ago he wrote The Time Machine in which he travel to 802,701 into the future and saw a frightening world.

He also traveled 30 million years into the future where he saw the death of our planet.

hagbard_celine
15-02-2008, 03:51 PM
I'm reading Northern Lights, the first part of Phillip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy. It's the book The Golden Compass movie was based on. It's all about parallel dimensions and the Illuminati etc. It's damn good!

http://img168.imageshack.us/img168/93/zznorthernlightsmk1.jpg (http://imageshack.us)

sunyatta60
18-02-2008, 02:14 PM
I just finished reading Frankl's Mans Search for Meaning a really interesting read.
I am now reading Lucy Hawking's book called George's secret key to the universe it is a novel written with her father Stephen Hawking the world Famous Cosmologist.

The Universe has multiple histories, each of which is determined by a tiny nut.
Stephen Hawking

chandrakavi
18-02-2008, 10:53 PM
I AM READING ALEJANDRO'S jODOROWSKY'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY,
called La Danza de la Realidad( The dance of reality) really neat.
Don't know if it has been translated yet.

comawhite015
20-02-2008, 01:34 AM
I AM READING ALEJANDRO'S jODOROWSKY'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY,
called La Danza de la Realidad( The dance of reality) really neat.
Don't know if it has been translated yet.

omgomgomgomgogomg.

I have got to get me one of those.

Is it AWESOME? :D

coshh
20-02-2008, 01:36 AM
In totality: Ride the Tiger by Julius Evola
Unfinished: Theory of Colours by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

chandrakavi
20-02-2008, 08:00 AM
omgomgomgomgogomg.

I have got to get me one of those.

Is it AWESOME? :D

Absolutely awesome, :D
Don't know if they have been translated, seems PSYCHOMAGIC has been. You would have to search for the rest Comawhite015;
Hope you find them!! :D :D

deliciously_fresh
20-02-2008, 02:42 PM
I am currently reading 'Caucasia' by Danzy Senna.

sunyatta60
01-03-2008, 08:18 PM
I finished reading James Herbert's The Spear and read that inside two days I am sure people like HC and Chand would enjoy that one.
I am now whizzing my way through The Tempest and cannot help but wonder who wrote the dam thing lol

sunyatta60
04-03-2008, 09:49 AM
Just finished reading The Gospel of The Second Coming and it was brilliant. Now reading Thus spoke Zarathustra :)

rogiebear
13-03-2008, 03:39 PM
The Self Sufficient Life and How to Live it. By the late John Seymour. F'ing amazing. Especially if you live in the UK (which I don't) or similar climate, because a lot of the tips are suited to that type of weather.

sunyatta60
13-03-2008, 10:58 PM
Now reading The Tailsnan of Troy by Valerio Massimo fits in with todays programme:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/history/inourtime/inourtime.shtml

ah42
14-03-2008, 12:27 AM
The door marked summer and Open your mind by Michael Bentine. (Yes.. the Goon.) I've read them before years ago, but am about to do so again as I just got them. Some very uplifting stuff for those of us struggling to remain positive in the light of events these days from a surprising author.

sunyatta60
14-03-2008, 09:36 AM
Forbidden Science: From Ancient Technologies to Free Energy
J. Douglas Kenyon
RRP: £12.99
Price: £8.57
You Save: £4.42 (34%)

Release Date: 21 March 2008






Product Description
Following the model of his bestselling Forbidden History and Forbidden Religion, J. Douglas Kenyon has assembled from his bimonthly journal, Atlantis Rising, material that explores science and technology that has been suppressed by the orthodox scientific community - from the true function of the Great Pyramid and the megaliths at Nabta Playa to Immanuel Velikovsky's astronomical insights, free energy from space, cold fusion and Rupert Sheldrake's research into telepathy and ESP. There is an organised war going on in science between materialistic theory and anything that could be termed spiritual or metaphysical. For example, Masaru Emoto's research into the energetics of water, although supported by photographic evidence, has been scoffed at by mainstream science because he has asserted that humans affect their surroundings with their thoughts. The materialism or absolute scepticism of the scientific establishment is detrimental to any scientific inquiry that thinks outside the box. This mentality is interested in preserving funding for its own projects, those that will not rock the establishment. From Tesla's discovery of alternating current to Robert Schoch's re-dating of the Sphinx, this book serves as a compelling introduction to the true history of alternative and New Science research. · Contains 43 essays by 19 researchers denoting cutting-edge, heretical or suppressed scientific research, including Immanuel Velikovsky, Nikola Tesla, Rupert Sheldrake and Masaru Emoto.

Synopsis
Following the model of his bestselling "Forbidden History and Forbidden Religion", J. Douglas Kenyon has assembled from his bimonthly journal, "Atlantis Rising", material that explores science and technology that has been suppressed by the orthodox scientific community - from the true function of the Great Pyramid and the megaliths at Nabta Playa to Immanuel Velikovsky's astronomical insights, free energy from space, cold fusion and Rupert Sheldrake's research into telepathy and ESP. There is an organised war going on in science between materialistic theory and anything that could be termed spiritual or metaphysical. For example, Masaru Emoto's research into the energetics of water, although supported by photographic evidence, has been scoffed at by mainstream science because he has asserted that humans affect their surroundings with their thoughts.The materialism or absolute scepticism of the scientific establishment is detrimental to any scientific inquiry that thinks outside the box. This mentality is interested in preserving funding for its own projects, those that will not rock the establishment.

From Tesla's discovery of alternating current to Robert Schoch's re-dating of the Sphinx, this book serves as a compelling introduction to the true history of alternative and New Science research. It contains 43 essays by 19 researchers denoting cutting-edge, heretical or suppressed scientific research, including Immanuel Velikovsky, Nikola Tesla, Rupert Sheldrake and Masaru Emoto.

chattanova
16-03-2008, 02:24 PM
http://img187.imageshack.us/img187/9848/61m67iy8balss500sx2.jpg

sunyatta60
17-03-2008, 12:36 PM
Just about coming to the end of The Tailsman of Troy by Valerio Manfreid

I found it to be very good!

chattanova
20-03-2008, 04:02 PM
http://img246.imageshack.us/img246/3207/51mr4n1p3ylbo2204203200oy9.jpg

''The more you study the Moon, the more you will became aware that it is an orb of mystery - a great luminous cyclops that swings around the earth as though it were keeping a celestial eye on human affairs..''

includes:

*hollow moons of Mars and other planets

*robot mining vehicles that move about the moon

*structural anomalies on Venus & Mercury

*NASA & Russian photos of spacebases on Mars

++++

A very interesting read, but half the book is photographs and they should been in better quality..:confused:

cheeney1
22-03-2008, 11:07 AM
I'm Reading This Book At The Moment


http://www.theharrowing.com/h-art/host-cvr.jpg


Interersting Book about Possession And Exorcism Of Five Living Americans....:eek:

pennycat
23-03-2008, 10:08 PM
I last read Access Denied for Reasons of National Security. Right now I am reading David Icke's "The Biggest Secret". I avoided David Icke because Cathy O'Brien author of the previous book I read, has the utmost respect for David and his work according to the book, disagreed with the lizard theory. Luckily something else steered me to look at alternative theories. I am mesmerized by all that I'm learning. I get the feeling many of you are not new to these ideas but when its new, its really a trip.

pilgrim
24-03-2008, 01:54 AM
http://www.prabhupada.org.uk/articles1/matrix108108.jpg

TRANSCEND THE MATRIX: FREEDOM FROM ILLUSION
By A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

FROM THE INTRODUCTION:

At the present time there is a great struggle between good and evil. The demoniac leaders of the world are desperately trying to put into place a New World Order of tyranny by using terror tactics like 911 on the innocent public. Although there is a gradual awakening in the hearts and minds of the people to this sinister agenda, the real solutions to it are not known.

The stringent karmic laws of the Matrix ensure that every action has a reaction, what goes around comes around. As we sow our seeds in the cruel and vicious treatment of animals in the slaughterhouse chain, we will reap the results in the form of nuclear war and a New World Order of fear and terror.

If a section of the people awaken to this real slavery enforced upon them by the Matrix or the material world of repeated birth, death, disease and old age and take to the spiritual path of freedom from illusion, the demoniac leaders of the world and their satanic movement will be defeated. Thus there will rise up a Spiritual World Order of peace, joy, enlightenment and equality for all.

If one wants freedom from the Matrix one needs help from a soul who is beyond it’s influence, beyond birth and death, as the bound cannot free the bound. In this book you will get a small sample from a reservoir of knowledge mercifully given by such a liberated soul, namely His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedata Swami Prabhupäda.

Srila Prabhupada came to the western world to fulfil the mission of his spiritual master. Surviving two heart attacks on the long journey across the sea he arrived in America from India with only a case of his spiritual books and seven dollars. After a year of struggle with nowhere to live he attracted some sincere souls by chanting Hare Krishna in a New York park. From these humble beginnings Srila Prabhupada established a world wide movement of over a hundred temples and self sufficient farm communities.

Srila Prabhupada's most significant contribution, however, is his books. He wrote more than sixty volumes of authoritative annotated translations and summary studies of the philosophical and religious classics of India. In just twelve years, in spite of his advanced age, Srila Prabhupada circled the globe fourteen times on lecture tours that took him to six continents. In spite of such a vigorous schedule, Srila Prabhupada continued to write prolifically, sleeping only two to three hours a day. His writings constitute a veritable library of Vedic philosophy, religion, literature and culture.

Although Srila Prabhupada's movement was infiltrated by the agents of the Matrix namely the Illuminati, their attempts to destroy his mission will fail. Srila Prabhupada has descended from the transcendental world by the order of the Lord to start a spiritual revolution in the impious lives of this world’s misdirected civilization. Now is the time for all to transcend the Matrix and attain freedom from illusion.

A truly eye-opening & enlightening book that i would highly recommend to anyone interested in the work of David Icke! I think it's so good, that i bought a bunch of extra copies for friends, etc.

If anyone here is interested in obtaining a copy please PM me.

sunyatta60
24-03-2008, 06:26 PM
The Gnostics (Pocket Essentials) (Hardcover)
by Sean Martin (Author)

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51DZ4D09TBL._AA240_.jpg

kblood
10-04-2008, 08:25 AM
I just read "Illusions, The adventures of a reluctant messiah." :D

Its author is Richard Bach. Its a nice thin book for a change, only 143 pages and only took me two days to read since I used 5 hours a day on it I guess :rolleyes:

Its about a guy who seems to be the author himself, who meets a mechanic. This mechanic can do miracles and they talk about why and how while they travel together. Very nice written, and very intelligent. I would recommend it :) Also very cheap. Usually I pay 2-3 times as muc per book.

ekx_dissillusioned
10-04-2008, 10:58 AM
The Threat

http://www.amazon.com/THREAT-Revealing-Secret-Alien-Agenda/dp/0684848139

raffles
11-04-2008, 03:06 AM
Who built the moon?
By Christopher Knight & Alan Butler

http://www.wunderkabinett.co.uk/graphics/whobuiltthemoon.jpg

logan 5
11-04-2008, 06:31 AM
Who Built the Moon will have you questioning what the Moon is doing there in the first place. Great book!

I just read Ask and It is Given by Esther and Jerry Hicks. Very inspiring stuff.

rynath
11-04-2008, 10:01 AM
"Everyone Poops"

I found it moving.

http://www.kanemiller.com/covers/0-916291-45-6.d.jpg

klinker
11-04-2008, 10:06 AM
I always have a few books on the go but recently I have read

The World Without Us - Alan Weisman

The Best Democracy Money Can Buy - Greg Palast

Presently I am about half way through The Secret History of the World: As Laid Down by the Secret Societies - Jonathan Black

galactic_stargazer
11-04-2008, 12:45 PM
I just finished 'The Mars Mystery' by Graham Hancock.

And now I have two on the go, 'Supernatural' also by Graham Hancock and 'The Nephilim and the Pyramid of the Apocalypse' by Patrick Heron.

sunyatta60
14-04-2008, 10:37 PM
I always have a few books on the go but recently I have read

The World Without Us - Alan Weisman

The Best Democracy Money Can Buy - Greg Palast

Presently I am about half way through The Secret History of the World: As Laid Down by the Secret Societies - Jonathan Black

To gain a better insight into what Black is saying in that book I suggest you then read Human Devolution by Michael Cremo because the two go hand in glove with one another and it helps understand why we are being lied to on all fronts. Especially about our history and why Science is being manipulated and suppressed.

hagbard_celine
15-04-2008, 11:33 AM
I've just started The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins.

I didn't think much of his TV shows, but it's wise to hear the other side of the story whether you like it or not.

cheeney1
15-04-2008, 11:45 AM
War On Irag What Team Bush Didn't want you to know...:D

By Scott Ritter Former UN weapons inspector

galactic_stargazer
15-04-2008, 01:02 PM
Who built the moon?
By Christopher Knight & Alan Butler

http://www.wunderkabinett.co.uk/graphics/whobuiltthemoon.jpg

I just ordered that along with 'The Witness of The Stars' by E.W Bullinger...http://images.alibris.com/isbn/9780825420306.gif

Book Description
In a work of profound interest to students of Christianity and astrology alike, E.W. Bullinger uses astronomy, celestial charts, and quotations from the Bible to make his case for the existence of God's Word within the movements and configurations of the stars themselves. Beginning with proof in Psalm 19 that "the Creator both numbered as well as named the stars of heaven," Bullinger interprets each of the Twelve Signs of the Zodiac as they relate to biblical prophecy, arriving at some interesting-and controversial-conclusions. British clergyman ETHELBERT WILLIAM BULLINGER (1837-1913) was one of the most respected Bible scholars of the 19th century. He is author of numerous works including Commentary on Revelation, Great Cloud of Witnesses, and How to Enjoy the Bible.

clozaril
20-04-2008, 02:31 PM
betrayl of the self-thefear of autonomy in man and women
arno gruen
http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/01/ciu/45/72/db76b2c008a0efe43d313010._AA240_.L.jpg

recommended