Customer Reviews


2 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
 
 
Only search this product's reviews

The most helpful favorable review
The most helpful critical review


17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars LOVE All of William Henry's books and DVD's!
There are two things I would like to address in this commentary. First, I would like to say that all of Mr. Henry's books are fascinating and entertaining, but the real value lies in his ability to provoke thought in the reader. He presents a unique prospective on ancient symbolism and language. Personally, I am grateful to Mr. Henry for opening my eyes, my heart and my...
Published on August 11, 2007 by Eris Discordia

versus
21 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Unmasking the con man
William Henry's books will only cost you money and fill your head with utter nonsense. He has no ideas of his own. He has borrowed them all from other writers, especially from Zecharia Sitchin. The only way in which he has shown to be very original and unique, is the way in which he "interprets" the ancient Mesopotamian languages, while having no knowledge of their...
Published on February 20, 2006 by Iconoclast


Most Helpful First | Newest First

17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars LOVE All of William Henry's books and DVD's!, August 11, 2007
This review is from: Oracle of the Illuminati: Coincidence. Cocreation. Contact. (Paperback)
There are two things I would like to address in this commentary. First, I would like to say that all of Mr. Henry's books are fascinating and entertaining, but the real value lies in his ability to provoke thought in the reader. He presents a unique prospective on ancient symbolism and language. Personally, I am grateful to Mr. Henry for opening my eyes, my heart and my mind! I am indebted to him for expanding my thoughts and increasing my awareness of so many possibilities! If it weren't for his thought provoking and sometimes mind-blowing suggestions I would still be looking at everything with a 2 dimensional, profane, and exoteric eye! Instead I am driven to do my own research into the esoteric and sacred texts as well as some mainstream work, in order to learn more about where I came from, why I am here and where I am going!

I highly recommend ALL of Mr. Henry's books and DVD's. However, the casual reader may find it difficult to grasp the deeper concepts at first. If you like books that put a new spin on old ideas this book is for you! I find myself digging out his DVD's and watching them all over again because they are so packed full of interesting ideas that I missed the first and second time around! His books are also treasures to keep and re-read from time to time!

I would also like to take a moment to address the comment that was written by "Iconoclast". I, too, have read Mr. Sitchin's books. While Mr. Henry properly cites Mr. Stichin's work as a reference point, I don't think that he has plagerized his work in any way! William Henry cites a lot of different sources in his works, which is common when giving an historical account. However, he adds a fresh, new approach to those historical accounts that delight and entertain the reader! It is obvious that "Iconoclast" is an avid follower of Professor Michael Heiser's work, of which I am also familiar. I have a lot of respect for Mr. Heiser's work as well. However to say that William Henry needs to be incarcerated and/or medicated because his ideas are different is ...well...medieval! Perhaps "Iconoclast" is a reincarnated Crusader from the 10th or 11th century!

I would also like to add that William Henry has never claimed to be a professor of language or a linguist. On numerous occasions I heard him describe himself as an Investigative Mythologist.

In fact, I have had the good fortune to have listened to many of William Henry's radio interviews on Coast to Coast and Jeff Rense. He always struck me as a compassionate, sincere man who never denigrated the ideas or religious beliefs of others. He patiently listens to the ideas and rants of others and shows the utmost respect to them, no matter how outrageous or silly they may sound! To me that is the mark of a truly great and wise man! I just don't understand why iconoclast would attack the man merely because he does not agree with him!

Also, Iconoclast has copied and pasted that very same comment on another of Mr. Henry's book reviews. I don't know Mr. Henry, personally, but, for what it's worth, I wanted to defend him against this obvious ploy to discredit him!

Peace and Happiness to ALL!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


21 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Unmasking the con man, February 20, 2006
This review is from: Oracle of the Illuminati: Coincidence. Cocreation. Contact. (Paperback)
William Henry's books will only cost you money and fill your head with utter nonsense. He has no ideas of his own. He has borrowed them all from other writers, especially from Zecharia Sitchin. The only way in which he has shown to be very original and unique, is the way in which he "interprets" the ancient Mesopotamian languages, while having no knowledge of their grammars at all. He never studied languages, and it shows. He admits that he does not use the dictionaries the ancient Mesopotamians wrote themselves, which allow a perfect understanding of their languages. No, mister Henry uses an English dictionary instead to do the job (Webster's)!!! English has no connection whatsoever with these ancient languages. He is also convinced that, if a word in a certain language sounds like another word in another language (chosen by Henry himself), they must both share a kindred meaning. F.e.: the Babylonian name "Gilgamesh" sounds like the Hebrew word "Golgotha", so there must be a link between them, a shared meaning. Which meaning? The one Henry himself attaches to both words, a meaning which wonderfully "corroborates" his theories.

This con man is clearly a psychotic person who is in desperate need of a straightjacket and a tranquilizer shot. He should either be send to prison or to a mental asylum. He should return the millions of dollars he stole out of the pockets of credulous, gullible people by giving them a false world view, based on linguistic errors and fantasies.

On the internet I found a very profound critique of Henry's linguistic distortions and fantasies, written by professor Michael Heiser who actually DOES know ancient languages. If you read this critique, you will see Henry's "stargate" collapse immediately:

http://www.sitchiniswrong.com/Disciple%20william_henry.htm

Professor Heiser: "In a nutshell, Henry dispenses with all the methodological, literary, linguistic, and anthropological (as that field pertains to language) knowledge accumulated in the past few centuries. He rejects facts we all know to be true-namely, in this case, the very idea that sounds that come from the human mouth (i.e., spoken language) DIFFER AS TO MEANING in different people groups. Lest this sound unbelievable, or perhaps incomprehensible, what I mean here is that Henry actually operates on the assumption that words can be taken apart by syllable sounds and then spliced together with other syllables-even from different languages-and meanings supplied to the results. To someone who has had my language experience (a dozen or so ancient languages learned from a deductive nuts and bolts grammatical perspective) this is positively maddening-and utter nonsense. I know the uninitiated reader may think I am caricaturing Henry's approach, but the proof is below. You've got to see it to believe it... Henry's major tool for determining the symbolic or root meanings (etymological meaning) to the syllables he chops ancient Sumerian, Akkadian, Egyptian, and Hebrew words in to is-I'm not kidding-the English dictionary. That's right, the English dictionary-whose word etymologies derive from Indo-European languages which were compiled before the decipherment of cuneiform. How is this possible you ask? Good question. I honestly can't even begin to describe the amazing extended non-sequitur rabbit trails William is about to take you on. I was truly stunned into silence a number of times, barely able to even follow the lines of thought. The matter turned from being laughable to disturbing, though, when Henry expressed his opinion that these ancient languages were a kind of bird language (I'm still hoping this doesn't mean what it sounds like). I am left with the impression that William may need some sort of help - but maybe I misunderstood that point. Well, here we go."

Heiser considers William Henry to be "Someone who interprets ancient texts with an English dictionary. Someone who violates every rule of language meaning and linguistic philosophy I've ever seen or heard of, as well as the cumulative body of anthropological knowledge surrounding division of people groups by language. Someone whose case is built on non-sequitur etymologies - where relationships of sounds (in English no less), syllables and language groups can be separated and spliced together at will to serve an interpretive agenda. Someone who refuses to get his word meanings from Mesopotamian sources. Someone whose approach to language cannot be applied in the real world lest it be shown to be utter nonsense."

He's right, you've got to see it to believe it!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


Most Helpful First | Newest First

This product

Oracle of the Illuminati: Coincidence. Cocreation. Contact.
Oracle of the Illuminati: Coincidence. Cocreation. Contact. by William Henry (Paperback - Mar. 2006)
$16.95 $11.06
In Stock
Add to cart Add to wishlist