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The Men Who Stare at Goats Paperback – Illustrated, October 13, 2009
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Bizarre military history: In 1979, a crack commando unit was established by the most gifted minds within the U.S. Army. Defying all known laws of physics and accepted military practice, they believed that a soldier could adopt the cloak of invisibility, pass cleanly through walls, and—perhaps most chillingly—kill goats just by staring at them. They were the First Earth Battalion, entrusted with defending America from all known adversaries. And they really weren’t joking. What’s more, they’re back—and they’re fighting the War on Terror.
An uproarious exploration of American military paranoia: With investigations ranging from the mysterious “Goat Lab,” to Uri Geller’s covert psychic work with the CIA, to the increasingly bizarre role played by a succession of U.S. presidents, this might just be the funniest, most unsettling book you will ever read—if only because it is all true and is still happening today.
- Print length272 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSimon & Schuster
- Publication dateOctober 13, 2009
- Dimensions5.5 x 0.7 x 8.44 inches
- ISBN-101439181772
- ISBN-13978-1439181775
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Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book entertaining and informative. They appreciate the well-written, concise writing style that keeps them hooked. The narrative style is described as intelligent and well-integrated, blending fiction and facts. Many readers find the book eye-opening and insightful, providing a balanced view of events. However, opinions differ on the pacing, with some finding it disturbing yet funny and poignant, while others consider it bizarre and irrational.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers enjoy the book's readability. They find it entertaining, funny, and informative with a touch of humor. The book is described as quirky, funny, and intellectual, making you think, worry, and laugh.
"...The book is a good read and kept me at the edge of my seat, for I bought the audiobook rather than the hard copy and the narrator does an amazing..." Read more
"...EXTREMISTS, and ultimately probably not as successful, but overall a wild and entertaining ride that surprisingly leads to some very topical issues." Read more
"A somewhat odd, yet reasonably satisfying read. Seems to become more serious and relevant at the end." Read more
"...Funny, sad (the now well known tragedy and probable murder of Frank Olson by the CIA in the 1950s is covered at length) and ultimately depressing as..." Read more
Customers find the book informative and entertaining. They appreciate the author's open-mindedness about incredulous topics. The material is interesting enough to keep readers engaged, and the context is a powerful tool for exploring subcultures.
"...Jon Ronson knows that there is both and amusing and serious side to his research, and he lets the readers know when he is trying to be funny and..." Read more
"...a wild and entertaining ride that surprisingly leads to some very topical issues." Read more
"...Seems to become more serious and relevant at the end." Read more
"...No problem, the material he presents is interesting enough to keep the reader going, as I read the book cover to cover in one weekend...." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style. They find it refreshing, funny, and understandable. The book is described as a quick read with an engaging narrator.
"...He sounds really convincing and at times I feel like the United States as a government does have a lot of secrets and will not disclose them, but I..." Read more
"...Ronson is so very reasonable and persuasive it is difficult to argue against this work without seeming like a stuffed shirt or a gibbering fool...." Read more
"Jon Ronson, as always, is a joy to read. His writing is funny, entertaining, and informative, and the book is really aided by his everyman persona..." Read more
"Unusually clear, funny, well-researched writing on a topic that can’t help but be compelling...." Read more
Customers enjoy the narrative style. They find the story fascinating and well-integrated. The book blurs the lines between fiction, facts, and disinformation. It's described as journalism at its best.
"...This book starts off saying that it is a true story, but I don’t know if I believe that or not...." Read more
"...Ronson states in the first sentence of the book, "This is a true story."..." Read more
"...Perhaps the most interesting story Has nothing to do about staring at goats or any other animals...." Read more
"...The old story is so much fun, why would anyone want to replace it with a story that's not fun...." Read more
Customers find the book insightful and balanced. They appreciate the author's humor and wit.
"...Ronson is a really good author and makes you see the side of things that maybe we should be looking at too...." Read more
"...Ronson paced me through this transitory period of my life with a balanced view, with charm and wit remeniscient of Bill Bryson...." Read more
"Mr Ronson's book is an eye opening, disturbing, and captivating read. Once you get started and immersed into the book it is hard to put down...." Read more
"Really well written and eye-opening of what people dreamt of in the 50's and put into reality" Read more
Customers have different views on the pacing of the book. Some find it disturbing and intense, while others describe it as bizarre and absurd.
"A somewhat odd, yet reasonably satisfying read. Seems to become more serious and relevant at the end." Read more
"...No question about it, Ronson writes like a rollercoaster. It is super intense and a wild ride but over in minutes...." Read more
"...The problem is the "good guys" are just as wedded to insane, irrational and at times medieval beliefs as the looneys on the other side...." Read more
"...what he's doing by presenting the book as "hilarious" - it starts out completely absurd, with the high-minded hippy ideals of a shell-shocked..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the humor. Some find the world funny and crazy, with sarcasm, irony, and ridiculousness. Others feel it's not funny enough and that the author's forced jokes into every paragraph are a distraction.
"This book isn't funny...." Read more
"...many interviews with a touch of humor, if not sarcasm, irony and ridiculousness...." Read more
"...But the humor is often of a wistful, guilty sort, because it clearly comes at the expense of others...." Read more
"...the facts and history of it, but the author's forced jokes into every paragraph became a distraction...." Read more
Reviews with images
This is absolutely a true story. Perhaps with some embellishment
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 20, 2015Men Who Stare at Goats
I chose a book that seemed interesting, so I would want to finish it and still learn something from it. The book is called I chose is The Men Who Stare at Goats by Jon Ronson. The book is a good read and kept me at the edge of my seat, for I bought the audiobook rather than the hard copy and the narrator does an amazing job at reading the book for you. I had watched the film when it came out, but after reading the book I found out that it was completely different than the book. There were some parts I had to reread because it transitions badly on some chapters, but overall it was a good book.
This book starts off saying that it is a true story, but I don’t know if I believe that or not. This book is about how the journalist, Jon Ronson, stumbles on the information about how the military and physiological worlds unite. He meets a series of men who tell him, in exact detail, how there are military psychic spies and how they have developed powers to do, what seems to be, impossible things. Chapter one beings in 1983 with General Stubblebine imagining running through the wall but of course fails to do so. Stubblebine is the chief of the secret military spying units and after banning his nose against the wall he thinks he passing through objects, such as walls, could be useful in the future and that is how the men staring actual goats begins. Jon goes on a series of interviews to find the men who started the group of men who were training to become psychic soldiers. He flies around the world to find as much information as he can, to make the story begin. He interviews men such as Guy Savelli, martial arts teacher who claims to have the Death Touch and to be able to kill goats by staring them to death. He interviews General Albert Stubblebine, who apparently believes, that walking through walls and levitation are possible if one is in the right mindset. He also interviews a man who believes his brother, Frank Olson, was murdered over fears he would reveal it to the press. At last he finds Jim Channon a cornel in the United States army, who wrote the “First Earth Battalion”. Jim is the one who started training men to obtain psychic powers; the manual he wrote explains how to pacify with the enemy with indigenous music with subliminal messages, positive energy, or discordant sound. Goats are used in the military more and more, he says. The goats are de-bleated so they will make no sound. He explains how the goats got to the military base and what they are essentially used for, but he wants more and he goes on the journey to find out more for himself and experience and record all of this in his book.
The book in itself is really good and interesting. I found humor in it to be really dark and twisted, but funny nonetheless. Jon Ronson knows that there is both and amusing and serious side to his research, and he lets the readers know when he is trying to be funny and when it is time to get down to business. Ronson has a way of making the reader become engaged and fully interested with what he writes about. Although, I do not know if to believe that the story is true. Maybe Ronson was having a dream or a vision of some sort, which led him to believe that those things did happen or that he has a really good imagination. He could have just researched all the information and made up a few names to tie up with what his research said. He sounds really convincing and at times I feel like the United States as a government does have a lot of secrets and will not disclose them, but I believe they do not disclose them for the Americans security. Ronson depicts the United States military operation in a way that, I can assume, only men high up in the military would be able to. He says things that are in a way disturbing, such as the soldiers who are being tortured with the song with subliminal messages. I imagine the United Sates military would have to do anything and everything to defend and defeat the enemy, but is the United States military really capable of all the things Ronson writes about? I had always put myself in the mindset that and army was suppose to help even those who were trying to hurt them, but now I think that that is what the government made me believe. Ronson clearly has a problem with George W. Bush and is not afraid to make that known to his readers. He blames the War on Terror on the president and, I feel that, he wants him to admit what he did. He thinks all of the War on Terror is a hoax and that the United States military is corrupt. The de-bleated goats are kind of a symbol to me in this book. The goats represent the soldiers who cannot speak of their psychic powers because they have been manipulated to keep their mouths shut.
I recommend this book if you are looking for a great non-fiction book. Ronson is a really good author and makes you see the side of things that maybe we should be looking at too. He supports his arguments with evidence that seems legit. He goes on a bizarre journey to find answers to the questions many have, but only he was willing to find out the answers. He uses the humor to engage the reader and keeps the reader hooked for the entire book. I would not recommend this book if you believe that there is nothing wrong with the United Sates government or any other government for that matter. I would also not recommend this book if you do not like to hear bad things being spoken about the former president George W. Bush. Overall I give the book a 5 out of 5 stars.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 28, 2008After the Vietnam War, as this story goes, the U.S. military was re-examining its tactics. Morale was low, and they badly needed to develop some new strategies and weapons to regain superiority. It was in this context that individuals within the intelligence community successfully pushed for the creation of a super-secret military unit, one that would experiment with honing and weaponizing supernatural and paranormal powers--the ability to walk through walls, turn oneself invisible, read minds and, as the title suggest, kill goats just by staring at them.
Ronson states in the first sentence of the book, "This is a true story." It's a much-needed statement, because the book so quickly delves into unbelievable weirdness that it's easy to forget that this is a journalistic endeavor and not a total farce. And in the end, it's more a story of Ronson trying to get to the bottom of this concept of "soldier monks" (as one person calls the paranormal soldiers) than it is a concrete story about the soldiers themselves. Ronson wanders from source to source, some well-informed and some undoubtedly whack-jobs, and story to story. He touches on everything from an elite unit of psychic warriors testing their powers on livestock in a small building at Fort Bragg, to the Heaven's Gate cult, to an alleged CIA murder, to modern psychological torture techniques used in Iraq and Guantanamo.
It's these last turns that give the book some weight. Because Ronson follows the story wherever the questions lead him, you might find yourself on one page laughing at a man who claims to be able to stop a hamster's heart with his mind, and then a few pages later contemplating the very definition of torture. Not as cohesive as Ronson's THEM: ADVENTURES WITH EXTREMISTS, and ultimately probably not as successful, but overall a wild and entertaining ride that surprisingly leads to some very topical issues.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 12, 2016A somewhat odd, yet reasonably satisfying read. Seems to become more serious and relevant at the end.
Top reviews from other countries
Mr Michael StoneReviewed in the United Kingdom on November 27, 20245.0 out of 5 stars Good price , and on the spot delivery time could not ask for quicker
Liked it because it came with a dvd and other a very good read
Ria SinghReviewed in India on March 5, 20225.0 out of 5 stars Scary Funny
The book is funny till the time you realize that its all true, the author is a very well known investigative reporter and then Yikes!!!! They actually did all this stuff and its creepy but if you are into that kind of a thing then its a really funny way to get to know about all these details, very good read.
Pablo Vera PrendesReviewed in Mexico on February 1, 20202.0 out of 5 stars could have been good
the premise of psych ops in war is quite interesting, but the book fails to deliver
b.bReviewed in Canada on April 11, 20185.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
good read
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aliaReviewed in France on April 22, 20155.0 out of 5 stars Formidable
Un documentaire drôle à se tordre de rire mais également très effrayant sur les méthodes expérimentales de l'armée américaine. Jon Ronson fait encore une fois mouche.


