A Light in the Darkness – Magonia

Charles Gritzner has thoroughly studied “ghost lights” in “one of the US headquarters” for the phenomenon, and reviewer John Rimmer has nothing but praise for the result. The geographer approaches his subject comprehensively, critically, and historically, with suggested considerations but no final explanation for the many mysterious tales he relates. Rimmer’s “take” on North Carolina Ghost Lights and Legends is both informative and enjoyable, and by all appearances, so is Gritzner’s book. In Space People Or Spies? Hakan Blomqvist has high praise, too, for the latest Nick Redfern work. Though Blomqvist differs sharply on Nick’s treatment of George Adamski in Flying Saucers from the Kremlin: UFOs, Russian Meddling, Soviet Spies & Cold War Secrets, Blomqvist calls the tome “a fascinating survey of the strange world of UFOs, Cold War secrets, and spies.” An older work well worth attention is lauded by Rich Reynolds in That Paul Kimball! Rich focuses upon how some of Kimball’s thinking in 2012 anticipated current…well, philosophical “currents.” The multifaceted semi-autobiographical opus is also an easy-reading, interesting romp with, of course, some of those “deeper” thoughts. On a more ephemeral note, John Keel Visits NASA preserves a significant point in time. Keel’s correspondence surrounds the Mariner 4 images of Mars, which as Keel site-minder Doug Skinner notes are “usually cited as ending the speculations about the canals, which were even shown on NASA’s maps until then.” (WM)

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