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Inanna Returns

Inanna Returns

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Innana Returns
Review: As a professional astrologer and student of metaphysics for over 25 years I felt compelled to share my thoughts about this amazing book. V.S. Ferguson has conqured the ultimate. Her talent for writing has made the impossible possible. Ferguson's story of Innana takes the reader to realms that will stretch the mind and change it forever. Innana chose the perfect messenger in Ferguson to take on such an awesome task. V.S.Ferguson, thank you. I am honored.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Inspired and Magnetic
Review: For anyone with an interest in a connection with God, Inanna Returns is like a shower from an enchanted waterfall. Like a bell ringing in a fog, Susan Ferguson's words rings forth a truth that is as delicious as it is enlightening. This is a book that you won't be able to put down and it may begin a truly inspired journey for the soul that is thirsty for the truth. Reader beware, this book is truly transforming in the most elegant and positive way!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Take me there
Review: Having read most of Zecharia Sitchin's paradigm-shifting studies of Mesopotamian civilization and the Sumerian cuneiform tablets, I was absolutely delighted to find that Ms Ferguson had picked up where Sitchin left off and transferred the Annunaki saga to the much more fluid medium of the novel. By allowing herself the use of reactivated genetic memories (though some will insist it all issues from "an overheated imagination") Ms Ferguson can boldly tell the story from Inanna's own viewpoint - and what a marvellously illuminating epic it proves to be! And why not - since it is essentially OUR story too. Once we accept Sitchin's well-argued conclusion that the human (Adamic) race is the genetic creation of Enki and Ninti, it is inevitable that discovering who our real parents are must constitute some sort of climax and denouement in the True History of the Human Race and the ongoing soap opera spinoffs it has spawned. Right now the world seems to be split into two camps: those who adamantly refuse to accept any new input that threatens established creation/evolution theories, and those who instinctively recognize that the sudden manifestation - nay, the spontaneous eruption - of such a massive body of recently rediscovered or remembered racial memory must mean SOMETHING! What it all means to ME is simply this: I am essentially my great-great-great-great-great- great-great-grandfather's great-great-great (to the 7777th degree)-grandson. And who's this Great Progenitor God who donated his Cosmic Sperm to our Genesis? Ladies and Gentlemen, I'd like y'all to meet a Very Special Progenitor God... Mr Erwin Enki! And let's not forget he had a lot of help from the remarkable and infinitely fecund First Scientific Officer on Colony Earth, the divinely sexy... Ms Ninti aka Nancy Ninhursag! Kidding aside, I cannot thank Susan Ferguson enough for offering us her INANNA books. They are divinely inspired keys to the gentle unlocking of our own Rip Van Winkled Elohim DNA - the bits of us that remember our angelic, starry origins. And also our earthy, primate DNA - the bits of us that know how much pleasure and what a privilege it is to be incarnate in biological form! As if that wasn't big enough a favour, Ms Ferguson has written her INANNA books with such an easygoing literary flair and vibrancy, she actually makes it FUN to delve into the depths of our own secret origins and destiny. Don't be fooled by her chatty, almost flippant, narrative tone; she knows her deep gnosis, yup, this Goddess Incarnate has certainly paid her humanoid dues!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An inspirational adventure of our ancestral past and present
Review: I was very pleased to feel a whole new dimension opening up when I first read the Inanna book. Sitchins interpretions and conclusions are rather "dry" and academic by nature. After reading Inanna Returns the Sumerian tales became alive. I recommend the book for anyone who has read the Sitchin works.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: ET Metaphysics
Review: In 1990 while reading Zecharia Sitchin's book The Wars of Gods and Men, I began to have visions of Inanna's life. Her experiences as the great-granddaughter of Anu from the planet Nibiru came to life for me for a 6 month period. This book is metaphysical in nature and has nothing whatsoever to do with the mythological fantasies derived from the somewhat spurious translations of the cuneiform tablets. 'Inanna Returns' is about the colonization of this planet by a group of ETs, her family the Anunnaki.
V.S. Ferguson

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This book adds personality to the gods and goddess of Sumer.
Review: Inanna Returns starts where Sitchin leaves off in his interpretation of ancient Sumerian cuneiform texts. It brings us up to date on what happened after the Sumerian culture was replaced by successor civilizations. But it does so in the words of Inanna herself, from her perspective as she communicated her thoughts through Susan Ferguson. For a while Susan did not know what was happening to her or why she was having so many dreams about the gods and goddesses of what is thought by experts to be just mythology. With all that is happening today as the close of the second millennium rapidly approaches, many people are looking to the past for answers. Here is a most charming and revealing book that comes from the past to us when answers are being sought my many. This book gave me additional perspective into the personalities of these ancient astronauts as Inanna communicated them to Susan. And what is most interesting from my standpoint is just how human these Anunaki really are. But that is no surprise if what Inanna tells us is true: That we were genetically engineered by them so that our ancestors would be more like them. I found this book thoroughly enjoyable as well as informative, and recommend it highly for anyone interested in the Anunaki or ancient Sumer

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Valuable Info
Review: Susan is just fantastic and I support her views

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A complex weave of perceptions in several dimensions!
Review: This beautifully designed entry in the burgeoninggenre of sprirtual fiction has been inspired bysome diverse sources, including the Hindu epic The Mahabharata, the works of Zecharia Sitchin, and the translations of the Sumerian hymns and stories about the goddess Inanna. In the first part of the story, Inanna tells how her Pleiadian family took over Earth 500,000 years ago and altered the human genome to create a worker race, who became pawns in the god's family quarrels and wars. Eventually, Inanna chooses to incarnate several times on earth and to help liberate the humans. Several of her multidimensional selves, including Gracie, a '90s woman, become the focus of the second half of the book. This is a rollicking good tale, a complex weave of perception in several dimensions, which Ferguson handles with aplomb. NAPRA Review

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Big Disappointment
Review: Truely atrocious writing makes this book a chore to get through. I hoped Ferguson might give this ancient story some credible modern context, instead she gives us a bad soap opera. Individuals looking for someone or thing to blame for their problems will find that Ferguson has provided the ultimate excuse -- humans can't be better because our higher DNA functions have been turned off by Inanna and her family. But, don't wory, they're helping us fix that now. Forget Ferguson's mess and check out the ealier texts on Inanna -- the writing is better and so is the story.


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