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Rating:  Summary: Best Reading Material Review: I haven't finished the whole book. I just wanted to let everyone know that this is a really good book. I haven't had a good book like this one in a really, really long time. It is really easy to read and picture since it is written in screenplay format also. Awesome book so far. I look forward to the rest of it.
Rating:  Summary: Fiction or non-fiction... you decide! Review: I've read all of the "Left Behind" series and the "Christ Clone Trilogy." This two-part (but both are in the one book) story leaves them all behind! (Pardon the pun.) I had no idea that history and the Bible went together like this. Adam and Eve were buried in the Giza pyrmamids, which were built by the righteous seed of Seth... NOT the Egyptians. How did a handful of men do that? By faith that moves mountains. Jesus said we could command a mountain to cast itself into the sea and if we had enough faith, it would obey. If that doesn't seem far-fetched enough, the author cleverly reveals through the plot and his characters how he came about such startling conclusions and revelations. (Now I understand the title). The real shocker was that Lucifer is a living machine made in the image of the original pre-flood serpent that joins with four other living machines of gold (lion, eagle, ox, and man) and carries God's throne this way in the 3-D world. Talk about some ancient Power Rangers! I won't spoil anymore of the story. You've got to read this one. It even predicted the fall of the World Trade Towers and the attack on Washington DC and this story was originally copyrighted in 1999!
Rating:  Summary: Revelations of half truths and deception Review: Once you've finished reading this book, it'll doggedly haunt you. The screenplay format makes it easy to read and it flows pretty quickly, but this is certainly no warm-`n'-fuzzy religious piece. Whether or not you agree with Rigsby's assertions, you'll find yourself immersed in the ideas he presents in this meaty interpretation of the precarious intersections of history, politics and the horrifying warnings outlined in the Book of Revelations; this timely book will definitely inspire well-needed conversation and debate. Flop down on the couch with a steaming bowl of your favorite soup and prepare for a good read.
Rating:  Summary: Controversial, intriguing Review: Once you've finished reading this book, it'll doggedly haunt you. The screenplay format makes it easy to read and it flows pretty quickly, but this is certainly no warm-'n'-fuzzy religious piece. Whether or not you agree with Rigsby's assertions, you'll find yourself immersed in the ideas he presents in this meaty interpretation of the precarious intersections of history, politics and the horrifying warnings outlined in the Book of Revelations; this timely book will definitely inspire well-needed conversation and debate. Flop down on the couch with a steaming bowl of your favorite soup and prepare for a good read.
Rating:  Summary: awesome! Review: This book is packed with so much information that I constantly had to set it down to absorb what it said, then I would quickly pick it up again. I really enjoyed the screenplay format because it was more visual. It was just like watching a movie. I can see why the title of the story is "Revelations" because the information is captivating. If you are looking for the answers to life, read this book. Almost every page is packed with information. It is a real page-turner!
Rating:  Summary: Wolf in sheeps Clothes Review: This book it's deceptive and very cultish. Read your bible study it meditate on it daily. This book is not of God.
Rating:  Summary: Wolf in sheeps Clothes Review: Well written and fun, David Allen Rigsby presents a theory of history/mythology that starts from the Bible and includes everything but the kitchen sink. We have alien Grays, evil Freemasons, mechanical Cherubic Transformer robot Spaceships, the death of Anne Frank, the Pyramids and the Sphinx, the Flood, giants playing with dinosaurs, angel twins, Adam and Eve with no navels, Viking myth, the Fifth Planet's destruction, Egyptian obilisk-shaped ICBMs,the birth of the Swastika, God and His soul in a fascinating 2-way consultation, Easter Islands's statues, WWII, the Four Rivers of Eden and the breakup of Pangeia, the destruction of Atlantis and the origin of hurricanes. All this is cleverly woven into a Christian science fiction/space opera that make Velikovsky's cosmology look dull and Scientology's alien-origin myth look like a sophmore student essay. The history and mythology of *Revelations* is dubious at best - clearly gleaned from popular culture and tabloid-style "non fiction" books - but it's just so much FUN that I couldn't help being charmed, by everything from its mundane view of Angelic life to its ingenious inclusion of every current New Age trend except Feng Shui. Structurally, the script has problems (lack of focus on characters, pointless scenes, some pacing flaws) but it has a good visual sense and would make a highly entertaining fantasy film.
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