Them
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Audible Standard 30-day free trial
Buy for $20.78
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Narrated by:
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Whitley Strieber
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By:
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Whitley Strieber
Them is the first book ever to examine the intent of the presence known as "aliens" or "visitors" from the perspective of what both civilian and military close encounter witnesses report happening to them.
Mitch Horowitz says in his preface that it's "among the most important interpretations of visitor phenomena since Jacques Valle's Passport to Magonia appeared in 1969."
Jacques Vallee, in the foreword, states that "This book cites fact after fact to build the case for in-depth realignment of public policy with public need."
In part one of the book, Whitley Strieber analyzes the experiences of eleven close encounter witnesses and from that derives the first in-depth picture of what this extremely strange experience may mean, and what our visitors' intentions may be.
In part two, he turns to the military experience, showing how the visitors themselves have forced governments to keep their reality secret, and what the effects of conflict with them has had on public policy as well as the lives of military personnel who have confronted them. Strieber also discusses why conflict situations occurred in the past and why this may be continuing.
He then explores the enormous difficulty of communication between species with differently structured brains, and how these issues can be recognized and addressed.There has never been a book written like Them. It is as much a first as Mr. Strieber's groundbreaking volume about his own close encounter, Communion. While, with the exception of a final, riveting chapter, it does not deal with his own experiences, in it he takes advantage of over three decades of study and research to create a vision of contact that may prove foundational to useful understanding of what is now a confused, sometimes violent, and fraught relationship.
Visit Whitley on his website, Unknowncountry.com and listen to his podcast Dreamland wherever you listen to podcasts.
©2023 Walker & Collier, Inc (P)2023 Walker & Collier, IncListeners also enjoyed...
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Conflicted
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Whitley's brilliance never gets old
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Them is an excellent roll up of what he has published since the 1980’a in book form or his podcast, Dreamland. I’ve never seen the UFP topic of these specific creatures better than Them 👽.
I encourage to be open minded and just LISTEN to what Streiber says in these pages AND the thousands of contacted people that sent letters to Whitley and Anne about their experiences. You can’t just make this stuff up based on the unplanned common straits of the Visitor phenomena.
Star Trek always wraps up complex stories of First Contact too easily as an entertainment platform. If this story is our true First Contact then the entire process is a lot more complicated than others realize. Them will be an important research piece used by UFP scientists for decades.
Star Trek Was Never Like This
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Interesting and thought provoking! Loved it.
Loved this thoughtful consideration of the phenomenon
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Have you ever read a story that you knew could be amazing and as you read on and on you got the feeling the writer was trying too hard? What he was communicating was interesting (to an extent) though could have been so much more with less…
No doubt an interesting story was there to be told. However the author had spent too much time expounding on what would have been better with fewer words and so resolving into a more gripping story.
As a narrator, Whitneys voice is pleasant and easy to listen to.
However the production quality is beyond annoying frequently amateurish. I’m no specialist in audio recordings though the ups and downs, low volume to high when he starts and stops.
Secondly, there are many occasions where entire sentences or groups of sentences are repeated giving the audience a very amateurish impression. These problems could easily been rectified had the author listened to his own narration, or an editor had taken the time to do so would have easily detected and delivered the listeners the professional story they paid to receive.
This is really shameful of Audible and the writer and editor. The quality being more in line with a middle school production than the company that I first invested in nearly 30 years ago.
Lacking dénouement. Dragging. Amateurish Production
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