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Book reviews for "Pellegrino,_Charles_R." sorted by average review score:

Return to Sodom and Gomorrah: Bible Stories from Archaeologists
Published in Hardcover by Random House (1994)
Author: Charles R., Bib Pellegrino
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Save your Cheetos
In addition to very fascinating excursions to Mesopotamia, where the author sends a camera up in a kite to take photos of the scorched lines in the earth left over from what he suspects may by either Sodom or Gomorrah, and the profile of ancient Ninevah including a canal system inside the city walls, Pellegrino takes a moment to let us know that prior to the elimination of coconut oil as an ingredient, Twinkies would burn for 20 minutes, and were a great back up source of light for underground explorations. Now, he makes do with giant Cheetos, held with a tweezers, which will burn for maybe 10 minutes. I tried it, and it's true.

Captivating, informative, transporting.
With wit and humor Dr. Pellegrino and his companions today led me on the most stirring and provacative tour of my life. Places once disconnected in my mind's eye are now alive, and full of fascination for me: the straight, steady Nile River Valley and its sluggish culture; the now-you-see-them-now-you -don't peoples of the fertile plains of Mesopotamia; and the ancient ancestors, cousins over the centuries from Asia, Africa, and Europe, woven together in the Middle East. The Gulf War, its rising up and falling down, make sense to me now, historically if not humanly, as does the conflict between Israel and Palestine, and the cyclic nature of life. Thank you, Charles, for a most interesting and illuminating day.

CLEAR, OBJECTIVE, AND UNBIASED; a must for history lovers.
Dr. Pellegrino welded my eyes, and mind, to his fascinating archaeological journey thorough the Holy Land. I enjoyed reading a book where the author doesn't use religious bias. His knowledge of the Bible is extremely extensive, which combines with his archaeological expertise to produce a book that gives the reader a better understanding, in clearer terms, of the fascinating stories of the Bible. Read this book with an open mind, and read it again once you are done with it. For those who are non-practicing Christians (like me), this book is an excellent companion guide to the Holy Scriptures. Once your mind is saturated in its informative content, you'll want to recomend it to the rest of your friends and family, and just about anyone else you meet from that day on. --Andrés Goyanes--


Time Gate: Hurtling Backward Through History
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill/TAB Electronics (1985)
Author: Charles R. Pellegrino
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Defending Time Gate
The ideas in Time gate may not, as one reviewer has put it, be unique or new anymore - including the idea of cloning dinosaurs or its support of Gould's punctuated equilibrium theory, mars panspermia, life under the ice of Jupiter's moon Europa. But that's the point: these ideas were very new and unique 20 years ago, before such things as "Jurassic Park" brought them into every household. Today they have turned out to be correct and may even be "old hat," but in 1982 they were attacked quite loudly. The reviewer below expresses a common misunderstanding, when he talks about attacks, against this book, from the scientific community. Let me correct this misunderstanding, which arises from the deliberately confusing name given by the attackers, to themselves (namely, "scientific creationists"). The scientific community did in fact support Pellegrino's "heresies" and even gave him shelter in the united states after his laboratory was destroyed. The destroyers were not "scientists" but quite the opposite: anti-evolutionists who called themselves "scientific creationists" - which should probably be enshrined somewhere as the biggest oxymoron of the 20th century. In New Zealand these scientific creationists included Dr Richard Bliss and "Icons of Evolution" author Jonathan Wells (of the Unification Church). In the U.S., about 1984, the book was in fact publically burned by Rev. Jerry Falwell's organization, along with books by Kurt Vonnegut Jr., in front of a library in Cleveland Ohio. The so-called "scientific creationists," the anti-evolutionists, claimed only to want "equal time," with Darwin,in the classrooms. The history of "Time Cate" revealed, at least in New Zealand (where it was banned completely and the author was put on trial literally as a heretic), what could happen when religious extremism masquerading as a plea for "equal time" ended up in full control.

Great book! But don't pay a "rare book" price for it.
Basically, the concept of "Time Gate" is pretty much similar to the much more famous book "powers of ten" (but with more text and less images).

Starting in New York of 1984, the book examines how the World looked at various points in the past. The first step is 4 years, sending us to 1980. And each further step is twice as large as the previous one: Thus the second frame is at 1972, the third is at 1956 and so on... the book goes on until the Big Bang is reached after 34 steps.

The book has quite a few cool photographs depicting the various time periods. The explanations are concise and clear.

Now you are probably asking: What the heck is the connection between this nice little book and the review by that guy from Seattle? (If he is really from Seattle...)

I'm as baffled as you are. The fact is, a copy of "Time Gate" was available in our Californian school in 1987. I don't know what happened in New Zealand, but in the USA the book was never banned or even publicly condemned by scientists. The reason it isn't available today is simply that it is a 16 year old book. Only best-sellers survive that long, and "Time Gate" was never even close to such success.

I don't know. Maybe it's just a marketing trick to lure innocent readers to buy a used copy...

Anyway, if you can't find the book at reasonable price, don't buy it. For despite it being a very fine book, "Time Gate" doesn't contain anything incredibly unique. The concept of "powers of ten through time" has been explored in countless other works. About the only thing that makes it real special, is the fact that the Twin Towers are shown in the first few frames (1984, 1980, 1972). Still, I don't think this alone would make it worth hundreds of dollars, although some people might think otherwise.

This is the One, the Book that Gave Birth to Jurassic Park
There's a reason this book is auctioned or sold to collectors at a premium (amount), even in bad condition. In it, you will read how life on Earth could have been added to, or helped along, by microbes blasted from the surface of Mars by asteroid impacts billions of years ago, how dinosaurs might be cloned from DNA carried by blood feeding flies preserved in amber, how extraterrestrial life may lie hidden in new oceans waiting to be discovered beneath the surfaces of Europa, Ganymede, Titan - and how Chaos Theory keeps it all from falling apart. All of these things are now acceptable, but not 2 decades ago, in New Zealand, to "Scientific Creationists" who put Pellegrino on trial as a heretic and a "corruptor of youth" when he spoke about and dared to publish his theories. This book has a history stranger than most any other. One of the reasons "Time Gate" is so rare is that it was banned and then publicly burned in New Zealand, where pellegrino was stripped of both his university position and his home, and where his laboratory was literally smashed to pieces by an angry mob. It must have been all the more horrifying, when he fled to the United States, to see his books publicly burned in a trash bin, by Creationist extremists, in front of a library in Ohio (New Zealand extremists, who have dogged him in the American courts up to the present day, might actually have organized the American burnings - which moved Ray Bradbury to send Pellegrino the original manuscript of "Farenheight 451," personally inscribed with New Zealand slurs - - - Now THAT just HAS to be a collectable!). Pellegrino did finally have the last laugh. In 1993, the New Zealand government gave Sam Neil an award for ACTING in the movie based on the same dinosaur cloning theory for which they threw Pellegrino out a decade earlier simply because he came up with it (Yes, you're reading this right: They gave the actor an award, and trashed the scientist). A Purchasing tip: The hardcover is the one you want. Most dealers deeply discount it because it is "without dust jacket." The truth is that there never was a dust jacket. The hardcovers were attached only for shipping to libraries, and only 1000 of these originally existed. Note also that while the book was so widely condemned that it never saw a second printing, it did have almost unprecidented influence in both Hollywood and NASA, and even before publication caught the attention of Isaac Asimov, who wrote in the Foreword: "I have myself written well over 300 books now, on all sorts of subjects, so I have small cause to envy any other writer, but I envy Pellegrino this book. I wish I had written it. My consolation is the knowledge that, had I written it, I would not have done anywhere near the beautiful job he has done, and that, in any case, reading it has been for me almost as much fun as writing it would have been."


Darwin's universe : origins and crises in the history of life
Published in Unknown Binding by Van Nostrand Reinhold ()
Author: Charles R. Pellegrino
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Incredible
This book and its sister publication Time Gate, though written two decades ago, STILL reads like a revolutionary view of the future. Pellegrino was one of the framers of the US/Soviet Space Cooperation Initiative, advocating and predicting an international space station, as a springboard to Mars and Europa, even before President Reagan announced the building of an American Space Station. He invented the dinosaur cloning recipe used in "Jurassic Park," predicted the discovery of oceans and the possibility of life inside the iceworlds circling Jupiter and Saturn, and even showed how interstellar flight at 92% lightspeed might be possible by the mid-21st century. In this brief history of life on Earth, we can see the first hints of the elegant writing style that we would come to love in his later books, both in his science and his gripping science fiction.


Her Name, Titanic: The Real Story of the Sinking and Finding of the Unsinkable Ship
Published in Hardcover by McGraw-Hill (1988)
Author: Charles R. Pellegrino
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A most interesting book
Mr. Pellegrino has written an excellent book about that tragic ship and about the background of the men who found her. A must have for any serious TITANIC "buff". It is also a great companion book to Dr. Ballards "Dicovery of the TITANIC" as it offers insights not contained in his book.


Unearthing Atlantis: An Archaeological Odyssey
Published in Paperback by Vintage Books (1993)
Authors: Charles R. Pellegrino and Arthur Charles Clarke
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A brilliant piece on what is most likely the real Atlantis.

No review can do justice to this fantastic book. Pellegrino not only gives a matter-of-fact explanation of how the Atlantis myth arose, a fascinating jump back in history to the beginning of time, and information on everything from Edith Russell Syndrome to Love Canal, he also shows the real-life workings of archaeology and the fascinating lives of Spyridon Marinatos and Christos Doumas.

I've read a few other books of his, all of them great. I hope to read many more.

Simply the Best
This is simply the best book I have read about archaeology since Gods, Graves, and Scholars. And it is the first book about the scientists who search for the past (actually written by one of them) that teaches us how to actually think in terms of deep time. Read this book and you will emerge from the "Mediterranean Genesis" chapter never viewing your own town, or anyplace on Earth, quite the same, ever again. The story of Atlantis itself, following the Frost/Marinatos hypothesis about the Minoan catastrophe of 1628 B.C. (a date finally fixed in stone by the Pellegrino synthesis), fitering down through history as the "kernel of truth" behind Plato's cautionary tale, is really the first book ever to approach this unsinkable subject from a purely archaeological and geological perspective, with no particular ax to grind. One learns why not even a small island, much less a continent, could have plunged through the ocean floor without leaving a significant and very easily seen geologic trace. Either Plato's Atlantis was based on an (only marginally) embellished and poorly understood account of history's largest known volcanic explosion (Thera/Santorini), or, according to Pellegrino, Atlantis did not exist at all. And to top all: the whole archaeological adventure is wrapped in some of the most elegant prose I have ever read.

A shining example of Minoan Archaeology
After reading Pellegrino's book, I was convinced that the myth of Atlantis truly stemmed from Crete and Thera. As a reader, I was a believer... as an archaeologist, I disagreed with Pellegrino and Marinatos, the head of the Theran excavations, as to the relation of Thera to Atlantis. Nevertheless, Unearthing Atlantis is an entertaining piece of literature with its merits in storytelling and historical perspective. I recommend this book with the advice to read more on the same subject and compare theories..


Return to Sodom & Gomorrah
Published in Paperback by Avon Books (Pap Trd) (1995)
Author: Charles R. Pellegrino
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This book has everything!
I've just finished reading this book and it's Pellegrino at his best - and that's The Best. Period.

All I can add to the other reviews is a personal comment: I wish every human on earth could read this book and understand it. Then we might finally have a common language, and some hope. If that sounds like overstating the case, consider that this book successfully takes on the task of illuminating life's greatest - and, at this juncture in history, most pressing - mysteries.

If that's not enough for you, it also contains several moments of laughing-out-loud humor.

The only thing I could find wrong with this book: a few minor editorial lapses (mostly things like repetition of previously-disclosed information, in footnotes) which are completely forgivable, considering how rich and complex the structure is. If I'd been editing it, I'd have been too dazzled to notice things like that myself.

Pellegrino is an international treasure. With a sense of humor.

Wow.

Prophetic
This book was first written during the height of optimism over the peace finally being achieved between Israel and the Palistinians. Pellegrino, relying on archaeology, a keen sense of human nature, and intuition, predicted that the killing would never stop, and that people in that part of the world would reserve their right to hate each other forever. The final chapter, with Arthur C. Clarke, Stephen Jay Gould, Pellegrino and Hawking, and several theologians, "gathering around the same watering hole, the archaeology of the Bible" and seeking signposts for the future in "the dustbin of history," is the most chilling echo from the past I have ever read. Look no further than the pictures - Pellegrino's painting on page 209 showing the WTC Twin Towers collapsing like a child's sand castle struck by a wave. If one looks, those towers seem to be destroyed repeatedly in all of his books. "Flying to Valhalla" (1992, page 97: "Seen from the air, the only recognizable features... near the air-scoured shambles of the World Trade Center Twin Towers: a shiny gridwork of smashed glass, two meters deep, marking places where streets once ran." Scientists are now preparing to clone an extinct Woolly Mammoth. Pellegrino saw that, too, more than twenty years ago when he invented the theory that became "Jurassic Park." Move over Nostradamus.

An erudite and entertaining synthesis of humanity's past
To merely say that this book is one of the best books I have ever read would be to seriously understate my opinion of this profound and important work. Pellegrino has a rare and uncanny ability to draw connections and to synthesize the disparate and widely scattered evidence of humanity's past. An admitted agnostic, he is wise enough to realize that no true scientist can be an athiest, but he also pulls no punches in his clear-minded assessment of biblical history. The fact that he is able to keep his sense of humor throughout only adds to the enjoyment of this book. One of the main reasons I believe this to be a profoundly important work is that Pellegrino presents a refreshingly honest, if not always optimistic, view of human nature. He harbors no illusions about our species' violent past, and thus provides us with the perspective and foresight we need if we wish to avoid the specter of extinction.


Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
Published in Paperback by Harperperennial Library (1992)
Authors: Jesse A. Stoff and Charles R., Bib Pellegrino
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Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
Unlike other reviewers, I found this book very disappointing: confusingly, sensationally(and obviously hurriedly) written, and, worst of all, medically out of date.

Endorsed by the Institute of Anti-Aging and Longevity
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, the Hidden Epidemic is an amazing book. Initially, it can be difficult to get through the first two chapters, but a real gem of a book with anyone dealing with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Epstein Barr Virus, Cytomeglovirus, HHV-6, Fibromyalgia and Environmental Toxins. We have been using the advice from Dr. Jesse Stoff for years at the Institute of Anti-Aging and Longevity in Carson City, Nevada because we believe that Dr. Stoff is correct in the belief that the body can heal itself through it's own immune system when dealing with the five issues that weaken the immune system called the P.I.T.T.S. which stands for Poor Nutrition, Infection, Toxins, Trauma and Stress. We have been applying the protocals from Dr. Stoff with excellent results. This book is a godsend from Dr. Stoff. It really goes into detail of the hows and whys of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and how to put it into remission with your own immune system. Dr. Stoff give excellent protocals to help the patient and the book gives 80 per cent of his treatments, but if you combine this book with his lastest one called The Prostate Miracle on cancer you have an excellent outline of what to do to improve you health, your immune system and putting the disease into remission. We have been using his research for years and find that the key to helping the patient the most is dealing with the stress and the new nutrient AiE10 in the Body Wise AG Immune to "trigger" the communication pathways of the immune system; especially as a modulator since so many patients (especially women) are dealing with auto-immune difficulties such as Lupus, Multiple Sclerosis, Rheumatoid Arthritis, Candida, Fibromyalgia and other combinations of viruses and bacteria. If anyone would like receive the advanced protocals of Dr. Jesse Stoff's lastest research in this area we would be more than glad to offer help at 1-800-878-6659 at the Institute of Anti-Aging and Longevity. What has been very helpful from Dr. Stoff is the T and B subset panel of white blood cells that allows the wellness professional to interpret the data on the immune function of the patient which leads to the proper protocals to take on immune reconstitution in dealing with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.

This book was a tremendous help
I was diagnosed with Epstein-Barr 6 years ago at the age of 22. My doctor told me to go home and get some rest. I had no idea what to do to rebuild my immune system. My future mother-in-law sent me the book, and I immediately began following the suggestions about diet, sleep, etc. I called 1800solstice and ordered the vitamin/herb supplements and homeopathic remedies Dr. Stoff had formulated specifically for CFS patients. Within 3 months I felt better than I had in years.

I recommend this book to anyone who is suffering from CFS, fibromyalgia, Candida, or any other immune deficiency disease.


The Killing Star
Published in Paperback by Avon (1996)
Authors: George Zebrowski and Charles R., Bib Pellegrino
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Good hard science fiction
This is an entertaining hard science fiction novel. It shows a different take on trying to contact alien species which we have not considered. Our radio broadcasts reach another alien species who are xenophobes and whose philosophy is let's get them before they get us (and it's nothing personal). It's rather amusing to see the basis of how they came to judge the human race. This book could as easily been twice as long as it was if the authors had cared to develop the characters more. The book follows various groups of survivors and their strategies for avoiding the aliens, some are successful and some are not. There are a lot of interesting scientific concepts presented in the book which make it a good read. If you enjoy the "hard" science fiction of Larry Niven, Arthur C. Clarke and Isaac Asimov, I would recommend that you read this book.

Wow! Maybe SETI is not such a good idea!
I read a lot. Quite frankly, most of what I read is trash. However, "The Killing Star" is one of a select few hard sci-fi novels I really, really, enjoyed. It is the only book I have read this year that I am still discussing with my friends. Get a buddy to read this book with you and the debate can be endless (i.e. a great choice for a sci-fi book club).The basic premise is that the search for extraterrestrial life (SETI) is frought with dangers. With some nicely done analogies and symbolism, the authors equate SETI to the the voyage of the TITANIC going full speed through fields of ice. Basically, the authors opine that any sufficiently advanced alien lifeform has no choice but to destroy any technologically advanced race it comes into contact with, so human beings should not be so eager to contact aliens by sending messages, radio communications, etc., into the deep reaches of unknown space. Why? Read the book. You will not be disapointed.

Planet-smashing action
Every once in a while a book comes along that keeps you thinking for days and weeks after you've read it. The Killing Star is one of them, and I found its concept of galactic racial preservation by pre-emptive relativistic bomb strike both immediately obvious and absolutely terrifying. The technical aspects of the story are enough to keep even the most hard-headed hard sci-fi junkie satisfied. All in all, one of the better sci-fi reads of the year


Unearthing Atlantis
Published in Hardcover by Haynes Publications (1994)
Author: Charles R., Bib Pellegrino
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Very important subject, but sketchy writing
YES: this book is about the real Atlantis. It really did exist, but not in the literal way that Plato described it, and certainly not in the way that New Age speculation "theorists" want it to.

I really wanted to give this book a perfect five-star rating, as the subject matter is immensely important, and the author's enthusiasm makes this book a truly exciting experience. The long story made short is that "Atlantis" was in reality a small island in the east Mediterranean way back around 1600 BC. Thera was a part of the Minoan Empire, and, being a group of islands between Egypt and Greece, had not only the world's first navy, but aquaducts (long before the famous Roman water systems) and a surprisingly highly-evolved culture. Then one day, the volcano at the center of Thera exploded with as least six times the power of Krakatoa (the 1883 eruption that was heard over 2000 miles away), and within seconds 2/3 of the island was in the stratosphere.

This was all before even the Greeks became the dominant force in the region, and so the sudden disappearance of the Minoans (who dominated trade between Europe and Africa) not surprisingly became various stories passed down through the generations, which is where Plato heard it. Plato's description of an entire continent all the way out in the Atlantic that sunk into the sea turned out to be an embellishment on what was, by then, just a myth. He was essentially trying to make a point about how quickly even the most powerful civilization can crumble, and what he said was passed down through the ages, in one form or another, to us. This is how and why these Art Bell "experts" have hijacked this subject and nailed it onto their "theories" of other subjects that have been blown completely out of proportion, such as the Bermuda Triangle, life on Mars, Bigfoot, etc. Case in point: just because Atlantis was advanced by ancient standards, NO: THEY DID NOT HAVE AIRPLANES OR LASERS. Sorry to burst anyone's bubble, but REAL history isn't "Spear of Destiny" garbage: it's how real people really lived, not whatever garbage you want it to be.

Of course, this book was an emotional one to read: an ancient culture creating such high technology (a millenium ahead of its time), only to be totally annihilated in just seconds. If the downfall of Rome and the unsuing loss of knowledge and the onset of the Dark Ages is considered to be historically tragic, this story is then the most epic catastrophe EVER. The author points out that if they were doing what took another 1000 years for the Romans to figure out (such as running water through pipes), who knows what these people might have managed to do? Maybe we would have been on the moon 2000 years ago. We'll never know.

The downfall of this book that I hinted at earlier is that 90% of everything important is said immediately: none of what I've said here is a "big mystery" that gets unravelled through the course of the book. It's like getting hit from all sides with amazing (and very enthusiastic) information about who the Therans might have been, how the world was at the time, and the excitement that Atlantis did exist after all. As great as all of that is, the book suddenly takes a left turn into endless archaeological stories and theories that simply don't have much of anything to do with the subject. At first, it's the author trying to put Theran history into perspective (he says that people have a hard time comprehending what happened over 2000 years ago, and he's right), but he just starts beating this idea to death. He'll occasionally get back to Thera and the ongoing excavations, and then he'll launch back into a whole list of other things that become more and more distracting. By the last 100 pages of the book, it becomes a chore to get through to the end, in the increasingly dismal hope that he'll say more than just one or two things about Thera itself.

This book isn't written as much badly as just way off target. The author's enthusiasm will make you picture him as a kid playing in a sandbox for the very first time (which is probably how he'd actually describe himself), but unfortunately, he runs out of steam when he runs out of things to really say. On the other hand, this subject is fascinating and important, and I would, of course, still highly recommend this book to anyone wanting to find a huge missing piece of history, or to anyone trying to scrape that layer of filth known as "New Age speculation" off of some really solid history: the real thing is far more interesting than the National Enquirer version.

Wrong time, wrong place, by coauthor of Atlantis In America
This is a beatifully written book. The author has a keen sense of the majesty of time and he very effectively imparts this greater view to the reader. He deals with the background to a very significant find in ancient civilization. However, to validate placing Thera (Santorini) in the context of Atlantis, Pelligrino cites Plato but suggests the learned man didn't understand math and referred to a culture destroyed not 9,000 years before but 900. Pelligrino, in insisting on a small Mediterranean island as Atlantis also challenges Plato's knowledge of geography. In the Critias Plato describes three distinct seas -- The Mediterranean, which Plato described as "merely a harbor, having a narrow entrance", the named sea (The Atlantic), and that other that "is the real sea (the Pacific), and the surrounding land that may truly be called continent (Asia)." In fact the Mediterranean could not have supported a climate such as that found in Plato's lush Atlantis 9,000 years before his time -- ice-sheets dominated all of Europe. As to inconsistencies with the legend, Pelligrino complains, "All we have is Plato's word." Untrue. There are other sources both in ancient times and currently. The most significant are Andrew Collin's GATEWAY TO ATLANTIS, Colin Wilson's ATLANTIS BLUEPRINT, and Ivar Zapp's research into the remarkable spheres of Costa Rica, ATLANTIS IN AMERICA, Navigators of the Ancient World. All point to an actual Atlantis just where Plato said it existed. On this point Plato's words seem likely to outive Pelligrino's.

Pellegrino at his best
This guy just never stops riding the shockwave - and with such elegant prose, too. He never tells you what is, as fact, but instead lays out all the evidence along with arguements for and against his own interpretations, then encourages you to think for yourself. The story here is an investigation of Frost and Marinatos' theory that the tale that came down to plato was the decline of Minoan civilization in the aftermath of the nuclear-winter-esque, 25,000 megaton explosion of the volcanic island of Thera (santorini) in 1628 B.C. The eruption and its devastating false winter-in-summer effects were documented and detailed as far away as China, and were credited with bringing down an entire dynasty. Plato did not write about the Chinese devastations. The Minoans were a lot closer; in fact, right at ground zero. Pellegrino's evidence suggests that Plato and the Egyptians were either writing about the Minoans (a modern name given to a civilization whose towns, with the impliments of daily life and even their food, were coccooned intact under mountains of volcanic dust), or Atlantis did not exist at all. Pellegrino's voyages into the Earth and back through time are so eye-opening, even mind bending, that you will never look at your world, or even your own back yard, the same way again. I know I won't. Like his other archaeology books, you simply cannot put this one down. They read better than any novel - and especially better than Pellegrino's own science fiction novels. The realities he finds down here on Earth are so amazing that I don't understand why he has to fly around making things up in, of all places, the star Trek universe. I guess everyone's entitled to do something a little kooky now and then, as long as they don't hurt anyone (Avoid "Dyson Sphere" and "Dust" like the plague). Someone with his talent for observation and communication shouldn't be wasting it in the literary ghetto of science fiction - or on chaos theory. With Pellegrino, everything eventually gets down to chaos, like that Malcolm character in "Jurassic Park"," who just happens to be based on him (even down to the point of sometimes getting a little too high on himself). The sister book, "Return to Sodom and Gomorrah" is just as great, if you skip the chaos theory chapter. His books on the archaeology of the Titanic are great too, but this one is his masterpiece.


Ghosts of the Titanic
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (2001)
Author: Charles R., Bib Pellegrino
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Pellegrino returns to the Titanic
Charles Pellegrino's earlier book about the Titanic, "Her Name, Titanic," remains one of the better books on the subject. Instead of rewriting that book, Pellegrino chose to write what he suspects will be the second book of a Titanic trilogy (with a third volume planned for 10 to 12 years hence). Pellegrino has the advantage of knowing almost everyone involved in the discovery of and expeditions to the Titanic, including Robert Ballard and George Tulloch, formerly of Titanic International, and he actually accompanied the 1996 expedition. He also is close to Walter Lord and has interviewed a number of Titanic survivors. This puts Pellegrino in a particularly useful position to portray the Titanic disaster in 3 dimensions while banging no particular drum. Pellegrino is also something of a polymath. He's interested in everything, as readers of his previous books can attest. He's probably the closest thing going to Isaac Asimov since the late Dr. A passed away. Given this, there are some real irritants here. I'd like to see all of Pellegrino's quotations and information cited. At the very least I'd like his assurance that none of the dialogue, particularly dialogue supposed to have taken place aboard the Titanic, is invented. It's also startling to see him consistently misspelling the name of Lord Mersey, the jurist in charge of the British inquiry, and of the Leyland Line, owners of the Californian, throughout the book. I find it a little difficult to believe that Pellegrino apparently buys into James Cameron's line that the ship would have been even more badly damaged had it hit the iceberg headon. Frankly, I can't think of a case in which the rammer came off worse than the rammee. Also, Pellegrino's interest in everything occasionally detracts as he flits from subject to subject without, sometimes, completing his original thought. But these are minor irritants, and I only mention them with the hope that Pellegrino will see them and make corrections in future editions. This book is extremely valuable and brings absolutely new information to the public attention. Especially useful is Pellegrino's careful forensic analysis of the Californian controversy, and his similar treatment of the iceberg sighting. According to this new information, the iceberg was sighted when so close to the Titanic that the ship actually collided with it almost as soon as the officers began to react, rendering unimportant earlier arguments about the size of the ship's rudder. Also very interesting are the results of studies into the rusticle formations that are speedily consuming the ship. It's fascinating to learn that new insights into biology are coming from these studies. There's a lot of really good new data here, and I recommend this book with only the minor reservations noted above. Needless to say, I'll be waiting eagerly, in ten or so years, for Pellegrino's next book on this seemingly inexhaustable topic.

Science, lies, and the Titanic
Did the N.Y. Times give a scientist a raw deal? I think so. First off, Pellegrino really does his homework, and that is a fact, not a fantasy. In the Discovery Channel Expeditions he is listed, aboard the Research Vessels at the wreck site, as "Underwater Archaeologist" and "Scientist at large." Simply go to Robert D. Ballard's book, "Discovery of the Titanic," and you will see that Dr. Ballard himself credits Pellegrino with the archaeological analysis that produced the "downblast theory." This analysis (still on-going) was begun during the winter 1985 expedition to the hydrothermal vents on the Galapagos Rift (A famous Ballard expedition in its own right! See Pellegrino's "Her Name, Titanic.") As for the reality of survivor's quotes, just a random flip-through reveals: Page 220, "Excerpt from a letter to Walter Lord... March 29, 1956..." Page 196: "Leading fireman Charles Hendrickson testified...Oiler Fred Scott told... Examiner Hharbinson [at the British Inquiry]..." Throughout the book, the author specifically cites who said what to whom and when - (eg: Captain Smith's and Mr. Strauss' last words to Mrs Henry Harris, as recorded in Mrs. Harris' diary) - hardly worthy of an accusation of "circus barking and fantasy." See also for example, Pellegrino's careful, point-by-point analysis of the evidence supporting James Cameron's theory that the entire five story, solid oak structure of the Titanic's grand stairway developed many tons of positive buoyancy and broke free of its mountings as the bow went underwater (which the NY Times calls a "flimsy idea" - as if the notion that wood floats is a "wild assertion"). Anyone who assumes that the N.Y. Times actually put Mr. Parfit's "book review" through a legal review prior to publication needs to be enlightened: Book reviews are allowed, by the law, almost total freedom to get the facts wrong because strict deadlines are automatically assumed. Moreover, a reading of the N.Y. Times review will reveal from the very first paragraph that the author, Parfit, was writing at an almost hysterical, vengeful pitch. You cannot read this without finding the thrashing itself entertaining, and wondering, "What did Pelligrino do to get the Times so mad at him?" A reading of the recently published decision by the N.Y. State Supreme Court. Appellate Division (June 27, 2000, Index No. 100423/99) might - just might - shed some light on this. A writer for the N.Y. Times had, in 1998, accused Pellegrino, in his book "Unearthing Atlantis" of falsely associating himself with the family of the famous Greek archaeologist Spyridon Marinatos, and even stealing credit for Marinatos's "Thera theory." (Sound familiar?) All the way up through the appellate court, the accusation was ruled unanimously as "patently false and susceptible to defamatory meaning." People who win libel cases can often be heard to complain about the original lie, the original accusation, being literally shouted by the media while the vindication, coming years later, gets a barely whispered "only kidding" somewhere behind page 74 of the classifieds in the times. Pellegrino's deal seems a little more raw than that. In his case, only days or weeks after the matter was settled, the Times came out with a "book review" reiterating similar charges (we read that Pellegrino falsely associated himself with the famed oceanographer Robert Ballard, and now even tries to steal some credit for Ballard's discovery of the Titanic). Book reviews, as I have indicated above and as any lawyer can tell you, are virtually sue-proof. Translation? Legally, anyone who wants to couch character assassination in a book review can get away with it. Coincidence? Maybe. But does it not have the disturbing stench of pay-back?

Forensic Study of Titanic Sinking
"Ghosts of the Titanic" is the second book in what Charles Pellegrino promises will be a trilogy about the sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912. It is primarily a much-needed thorough forensic analysis of the ship's sinking, based on data from recent expeditions to the site, never before published or analyzed journals, letters and interviews with witnesses, and information from the original investigations of the disaster. What physically happened to the ship at every moment from just before its impact with the iceberg until it hit the ocean floor is spelled out in detail. Some helpful diagrams are included as well. I was amazed and fascinated by how much of the activities on board the Titanic during its final hours could be reconstructed when all eyewitness accounts are considered. Among other things, new information may exonerate Captain Smith of much of the blame for the tragedy, while thrusting Bruce Ismay of the White Star Line and Captain Lord of the Californian into even harsher light than previously imagined. As is typical of Charles Pellegrino's books, "Ghosts of the Titanic" is written in the order in which the information came to light instead of being organized by topic. This creates a sense of anticipation and allows the reader to understand the Titanic in ever-increasing depth, little by little, just as Dr. Pellegrino and his colleagues did. But the lack of conventional organization may frustrate some readers, and it means you don't find out about some crucial details until the end of the book. All in all, a fascinating account of what people did to sink a ship in 1912 and what goes on at the bottom of the ocean today as a result.


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