A mixed bag of eccentricities, but I think that was probably the intent.
Reviewed by
an Amazon user,
August 25, 2005
Someone once said of this book (or maybe it was the second, I don't recall exactly) that if nothing in it offends you, then you aren't thinking. I think thats a decent assesment, and given the often conflicting material in the book, I doubt anyone is expected to agree with everything (or even anything) inside it. Some of the material is just curiosities, and some of it I find fills a place in my music collection (the entries by Monte Cazazza and so on. Sure, they aren't musical, but I like to collect everything I can, musical or not.)
Although its been a while since I read the piece, I recall finding the section on the Process Church quite fascinating, and it was the first actual in depth work I read on that subject. Same with the Jack Parsons piece, a subject I had heard about due to my prior interest in conspiracy theories, but had never delved too deep in to it.
The Monte Cazazza and Michelle Handleman piece is enjoyable and is in many ways a forerunner to much of the modern concerns over excessive consumerism and advertising, covering this ground long before Adbusters was formed, or Fatland and Affluenza hit the best seller lists.
Its actually surprising, now that I look back at the book and compare it to the world now, how some of the more political topics in it, such as the chapter titled "How To Kill" (regarding whether or not African Americans are subjects of a secret program of white supremacist genocide) have, in various forms, entered mainstream political discourse.
One of my favorite parts, since its just so unintentionally amusing due to the content, are the unusual letters to the editor, which elicit some decent laughter.
Also on a more humorous note are the Charles Fort quotes, since, despite the seriousness with which people take "fortean" phenomenon today, Charles himself was quite the humorist and approached often these matters with tounge firmly in cheek. Thats not to say he enver had anything serious to say; he certainly did, but as some fo these quotes show, he never wanted to say it as a prophet of doom or finger wagger.
The most serious, and I think "prophetic" section, (no pun intended) is the one titled "The Christian Right, Zionism, and the coming of the Penteholocaust." This essentially details, without going in to too much specifics here, how a small cadre of right wing christian fundamentalists wanted to trigger the end of the world. As insane as that sounds, its all too real, and the reality of it has become even more frightening in the 20 some years since the book was released. Back then, I'll grant that this may have been a fringe phenomenon even in the religious right, but the idea that christians must somehow "accelerate" the coming of Jesus has become much more common in the religious right. Its what drives fundamentalists to do things like pay for Jews to return to Israel en masse (as they think all Jews must return to Israel before the end of the world can occur.) This chapter was my first exposure to this frightening ideology, and I'm sad to say that no one has heeded the warnings, and these people who would try to bring about the end of the world are all the more powerful today. That piece alone makes the both worth buying, and I think its a good introduction to the myriad of writings on that subject.
Two more points of minutae;
1.The book, as is often claimed provided inspiration for Chris Carter of X-Files fame, and loving the X-Files as much as I do, that just adds to the books favor.
2.Content aside, the book is a great piece to own for the excellent Joe Coleman art that graces the cover.
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Now You Know What You Did Not Want To Know...
Reviewed by
an Amazon user,
December 22, 2004
I am not by any means a squeamish person. In my relatively brief tenure on this planet, I've seen first-hand a great many things the 'average' individual might deem repulsive, repellent, unsavory, unseemly. Finally purchased this book ( a first-edition, no less ) at an independent record store, owing primarily to it's hipster cred as 'the' book to own for those in-the-know. While there is very little in this title that was a complete surprise to me ( in my varying lines of employment, I discovered early on that the human animal's capacity for cruelty and attendent perversion is virtually limitless ), to have all the various pecadilloes ( and their sub-genres ) represented between the pages of a single book that could be carried around as easily as the latest Tom Clancey crapfest was something akin to discovering that you possessed a vial containing every known social disease, and a few that were as-yet unclassified - good to know, but do you really want this thing lying around your house? In my case, no. Interesting book, I 'get' the point ( the human race is bipedal ape scum, and we're all going to hell in a handbasket ), but this is the first time I have ever felt moved to drop a book in the trash, and I am a compulsive book-buyer/reader, with literally thousands of titles lining the shelves. Just not this one. Not anymore.
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Apocalypsis Iesu Christi...
Reviewed by
an Amazon user,
May 10, 2003
"The Apocatastis: We are living during the time of a great apocatastis, the Greek term for the return of all things that have been lost and the revelation of all things at the end of time." The apparent thesis of Adam Parfrey's APOCALYPSE CULTURE is that all insane, mind-blowing and utterly bizarre ideas, theories and behaviors will be manifested and then the end will come. The book, published in the late 80's, is a collection of essays, short stories, articles, rambling tid-bits and other odds-and-ends from a variety of authors. The prevailing themes in APOCALYPSE CULTURE could be classified as conspiracy theory, paranoia, schizophrenia, apocalypticism, surrealism, ultra-anarchism, nihilism, libertarianism, anti-materialism, Luddite, anti-establishment, occultism, Satanic, and egotism. A number of the essays stood out. "Infernal Texts" is a collection of quotes from various sources about man's total worthlessness and the need for a massive upheaval to eradicate the false social order that is now in place. "The Invisible War" by ... La Vey is about how constant sensory bombardments upon human beings in the modern world constitutes a collective genocide against humanity. "The Cereal Box Conspiracy" details the negative effects of sugar breakfast cereal marketing towards children, how it takes advantages of their inner fears and sexual ambiguity. "From the Mark of the Beast to the Black Messiah Phenomenon" is about a Christian researcher's theories as to who the antichrist is, and the antichrist will apparently be a black man who will be worshipped by Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists and others the world over. "Eugenics: the Orphaned Science" presents the pro-eugenics position, and gives quotes of famous people who argued for improving the biological stock of mankind through selective breeding. "The Christian Right, Zionism and the Coming Penteholocaust" is an especially disturbing and interesting study examining the relationship between militant Israelis and their Christian fundamentalist supporters in the US. Their goal is a 'Greater Israel' in the Middle East with a rebuilt Temple and Jewish control of most of Jordan, Syria, Iraq and Lebannon. This is supposed to be a part of Biblical prophecy, according to the fundies, and it is necessary for this set up to occur before World War III begins and Christ can return. "Vengeance in Secret Societies" studies how secret societies in world history used violence and terrorism to further their political goals, starting with the Assassins in the Middles East during the time of the Muslim Caliphate. "The Call to Chaos" by James Shelby Downard is one of the most ???--huh things I've read--something about a magical bottle at the test site of the first nuclear bomb and it has something to do the the cabalistic/Masonic uniting of the mystical male and female sexual energies. Speaking of nukes, the last essay, "Meditations on the Atom and Time" will blow your mind as it relates how the nuclear bomb has achieved godlike status in our collective psyche. An important lesson to be learned from APOCALYPSE CULTURE considering the popularity of US meddling in Middle Eastern affairs today: "It is an ancient belief of black magic that manifesting the presence of the diety required sacrifice of human victims. It was also believed that the life energy of the victims would increase the potency and longevity of the sorcerer. A mass sacrifice might even confer enough energy to make the sorcerer immortal. Could this be the reason among the circles of the Christian Right, that the Penteholocaust, the sacrificial burning of death, will invoke Christ the vampire and render his disciples immortal."
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