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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent,
By
This review is from: Alien Abductions (Hardcover)
Since the late 1980's more & more people in the Americas & in Europe have come to believe they have been forcibly abducted by alien beings, taken on board their spacecraft, and subjected to a range of distressing indignities.
The controversy over these extraordinary claims has been fierce. Believers and skeptics share common ground only in ceding few points & showing little tolerance of their opponents. While the commentators argue, many who have undergone abductions are angry & bewildered. They have been shaken to the core by their experiences, and want explanations & reassurance. While many abductees support abduction researchers wholeheartedly, a significant number are disenchanged with them. Both groups despair at the dismissal & scorn of hardline skeptics. This book presents an overview of both sides of the abduction argument, but it goes much further than that. A number of researchers have now recognized that something truly strange lies at the heart of the abduction experience, even though it may not involve actual alien beings. A few have realized that, regardless of whether abductions are really happening, the stories told by abductees and the apparent activities of the aliens have achieved the status of a modern mythology. Alien Abductions ruthlessly exposes the assumptions & delusions of both the promoters of the abduction phenomenon & their most intolerant critics. At the same time, the author gives an objective account of the witnesses themselves, their sense of betrayal & confusion, and he striking variety of their experiences. This book includes previously unpublished artworks & photographs - some from private collections, others commissioned especially for this book - as well as exclusive interviews with abductees, offering a thought-provoking perspective on the abduction experience. Believers & skeptics alike will find this an unforgettable expose of alien encounters.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Even-handed but sceptical,
By Ashtar Command "Seeker" (Stockholm, Sweden) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Alien Abductions (Hardcover)
This book by Peter Brookesmith is an even-handed but ultimately sceptical look at the bizarre phenomenon of "alien abductions".
Thousands of Americans claim to have been abducted by evil beings from other planets, taken onboard their vessels, and forced to undergo painful medical examinations. Some claim to have been repeatedly abducted, and others believe they have given birth to alien-human hybrids. Often, these "memories" are only retrieved during hypnosis, and there are a number of "therapists" who work exclusively with abductees, the most notorious being Budd Hopkins and David Jacobs. The former even claims that UN Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar witnessed an alien abduction in New York! Initially a fringe phenomenon, the idea of alien abductions have become part of popular culture, to a large extent due to Whitley Strieber, an author of horror fiction who claims to have been abducted multiple times by aliens known as "Greys". Strieber have subsequently become a kind of New Age prophet. The late John Mack is another person who connected abductions, the UFO phenomenon and New Age forms of spirituality. Mack was a professor at Harvard when he became uncritically interested in abductions. To be perfectly honest, I find it difficult to take this phenomenon seriously. We are obviously dealing with people in need of psychiatric treatment, or with various kinds of delusions. The phenomenon also strikes me as very "American" in the worst sense of that word. The United States, the first nation to put a man on the moon, is also the Western nation most reeking with pseudoscience, superstition and fundamentalism. Where else than in America can bizarre notions such as these become a veritable mass movement? Darkest Africa, perhaps? Having this in mind, I admire Peter Brookesmith for writing about the subject in such an even-handed and sober way. The author is obviously seriously interested and even intrigued by the phenomenon, and he treats the abductees with a large amount of respect. Indeed, a large portion of the book consists of abduction cases, described on the basis of interviews with the abductees themselves. Yet, Brookesmith simply cannot believe that the "abductions" are objectively real. He discusses various psychological explanations, including hypnagogic dreams, somnambulism, or the effects of hypnosis. Various cultural factors are also mentioned. The aliens known as "Greys" became common in US abduction reports after Strieber's books had become bestsellers. Before that, the space aliens supposedly seen by people were much more diverse, and apparently they still are in Europe, where Strieber has always been less popular. Brookesmith also discusses a more physical explanation. He believes that unknown but natural electromagnetic phenomena, something akin to will-o-the-wisps, might induce humans to hallucinate and thus imagine "alien abductions". Somehow, these earth lights make the victim oversensitive to further exposure to electricity, hence triggering new hallucinations ("repeated abductions"). The theory is interesting, but it's not clear to me how much experimental evidence is behind it. "Alien Abductions" gives a good overview of the abduction phenomenon, its principal players, and various theories about the origins of these notions. It's illustrated with artwork showing UFOs and abductions! Recommended. |
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Alien Abductions by Peter Brookesmith (Hardcover - 1998)
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