Size | Seeds | Peers | Completed |
---|---|---|---|
3.86 MiB | 0 | 0 | 0 |
from an amazon reviewer "All three of Turner's books focus on the alien abduction phenomenon, but each is radically different from the others in character and format. `Into the Fringe' (1992) is essentially autobiographical and describes the process of how the author became aware that abduction by `alien entities' was the origin of a range of bizarre and otherwise inexplicable events which afflicted her family over many years. The second book `Taken' (1994) chronicles eight separate abduction cases, all women and all disguised with pseudonyms: a complex professional study in hands-on investigative work and deductive reasoning, using scientific methods to collate the data and draw tentative conclusions.
Turner's third book, written roughly concurrently with `Taken', is `Masquerade of Angels'. Prior to buying and reading MoA, I looked at the other reviews posted on amazon to get an idea of what the book was about. Unfortunately none of them tell the prospective reader much about the book or its content, but instead make generalised statements about the author and the abduction phenomenon, so I was none the wiser.
MoA is the story of Ted Rice, an Alabama-born psychic with a life full of the most extraordinary weird incidents of every imaginable flavour, and to top it all off, an alien abductee. The book is written in novelistic style in the third person, divided into five named sections (`The Siege', `The Child', `The Call', `The Maze' and `The Light') of roughly equal length, and runs in total to 255 pages."
I personally believe not all alien are as bad as Turner describes them, and not all aliens are as good as Greer describes them, just as humans there are different personalities and motives, but these are interesting books