Unidentified Flying Objects
Der Voron (Guest reviewer - Denise M. Clark)
2002 Publish America, Inc.
ISBN: 1591297389 Amazon's price is: $19.95
Starcraft. Annotated & illustrated examples of possible starship models, their makeup, armaments, defensive mechanisms & the extraterrestrials that have flown them.
Guest Reviewer Denise M. Clark writes:
The existence of extraterrestrials has long been a subject of heated debate between scientists, scholars & stargazers who've spent many an hour studying the night sky & the universe beckoning beyond. But is there proof of such distant life forms? & if so, where is it?
It's easy to make jokes about ‘Area 51' or Roswell, New Mexico, but certainly there is a basis for those jokes & rumors. Something had to have happened in these places, & many others around the globe, to engender such speculation & argument.
In Unidentified Flying Objects: Starcraft, Der Voron offers an extremely well researched & detailed report of incidents which have occurred all over the world: statements from India to the High Command of German Forces during World War II, from Roswell, New Mexico to the plains of South America to the fjords of the Norway.
Highly annotated & illustrated, this book offers a wealth of documented information on ‘Starcraft,' otherwise known as flying saucers, & their depictions in historical writings. The author's use of a plethora of written material enhances the his descriptions of personal civilian accounts of their meetings with these craft, to the accounts of military fighter pilots who claimed to have been fired upon by ‘unidentified' craft.
Also explored in great detail, is the intelligence of our sea life, mainly in the forms of the dolphins & the octopi of our deepest oceans. How did these creatures gain such highly specialized communication skills? How is it that an octopus can experience an event, & then remember it the next time?
While replete with scientific data, terms & information, this work by Der Voron is nevertheless highly readable & extremely illuminating for the common reader with no prior knowledge of extraterrestrial existence, it also provides hours of reading material & documents to keep the more knowledgeable busy.
Der Voron's conscientious effort to dig deep for his sources & compare these sources & data is admired, as is his determination to share his obvious knowledge within the pages of his book.
It is hoped that Unidentified Flying Objects: Starcraft may find its way into many hands, for it is an immensely interesting topic, & one that will be explored for many years to come.
(01/05/03)