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Rating:  Summary: God Games - What do you do forever Review: I bought this book thinking that it really would reveal what God does with his/her unlimited time. First of all, the author has a very difficult writing style. His ideas just don't come across well. Secondly, throughout the entire book, the author argues the validity of his prior book, "Breaking the Godspell", in a rather paranoid style. Now for the real kickers. The author says that vision is gained on LSD drugs, since it is a "valid" mind expander. He also states that LSD, or "drug users" will RE-INVENT our future. I have a problem with the concept that illegal users of illicit "entertainment" drugs will reinvent the future of any race of beings, let alone anticipate (instead of re-invent) their own future. The reader gets the feeling that the author has a lot more to say about drug use and abuse and has little to say about the purported topic of his book "God Games, What do you do forever?" No research is apparent on the author's part on the transparent subject allegedly the topic of his book. Save yourself the frustration, and read something else instead.
Rating:  Summary: Wort reading but difficult to read Review: In a certain way I must agree with some of the critics some readers made. The book is really difficult to read! The sentences are long, dense and full of elaborate words. You start a page and there are very few paragraphs; you nearly loose your strenght for keeping reading. In my opinion Mr Freer is surely not a good writer, but his brain works well and he has ideas, lots of ideas, and there resides the basic interest of the book. Forget about style and keep reading, your mind will keep pace with his, and you will be going from discovery to discovery. Taken as for his base the Zacharia Sitchim books, which I had read all, he expands the subject in an Horizont of several hundreds years from now. It shakes a lot of your convitions, fixing at the same time lots of loose pieces of the puzle one normally has in the mind. It is not easy to trow away 3000 years of mind control, but it opens completly new horizons. One needs courage to write today such a book. and even Z. Sitchin, the original father of such theory stopped at a certain point and didn't had the courage to go further. Freer goes all the way, and opens full the window, so that your mind can have no limits for expansion. It puts the Universe in your hands and makes you a natural solipsit! Sorry for my English, but I had to rate this book 4, even if I would rate his English 1
Rating:  Summary: A Milestone Work Review: Mr. Freer, in this work, deserves five stars simply for his courage in making public the mental leaps all persons who have braved the profound yet shattering implications of Sitchin's theories are forced to face. Most reader's of Sitchin's works continue the evolution his unveiling of our amnesia inspires, by seeking further clues in the past. Not so Mr. Freer; he takes us on a three part journey, past present and future, the whole way imparting responsibility for our own design. Yes it is difficult to struggle through parts; profound insights demand depth of explaination. This book, these leaps, are not for the lazy who prefer sit-com, short attention spam, spoon fed mental pablum; it is written for minds that will and do shape the future - Futants! Self referencing, humanist, no longer puppets of religious indoctrination living out guilt paradigms toward an absent God; Futancy is human at its purest and most unabashed. Mr. Freer points us toward our destiny as gods in our own right. If Mr. Sitchin taught us that our God in all his faces is but rumour of powerful, dominating ET's who abandoned us in the distant past, Mr. Freer provokes us to throw off Their yoke forever and take back our planet, take back our past, but mostly to create a future for ourselves, for our children, where we as a bicameral species learns how to Live Forever.
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