Used price: $6.35
Collectible price: $3.16
Used price: $29.00
Collectible price: $52.94
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.
Used price: $8.50
Used price: $2.15
Collectible price: $5.29
Used price: $0.69
Collectible price: $7.95
Buy one from zShops for: $3.99
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.
List price: $15.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $1.87
Collectible price: $5.99
Buy one from zShops for: $6.99
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.
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $0.99
Buy one from zShops for: $2.28
I recommend this book to anyone who is suffering from CFS, fibromyalgia, Candida, or any other immune deficiency disease.
Used price: $3.17
Collectible price: $5.28
Used price: $24.01
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.
Used price: $13.00
Buy one from zShops for: $12.68