Home :: Books :: Science Fiction & Fantasy  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy

Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Cosmic Voyage

Cosmic Voyage

List Price: $6.99
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Paradigm Flip. . . New World (Universe) View
Review: I don't have much to add to the other reviews. I would recommend this book to ALIEN investigators and Out OF Body Experiencers (OBE). As for where is his evidence, you need to check it out yourself. He gives several references to begin your remote viewing abilities (OBE). Among these are transcendental meditation and Robert Monroe's books. Whether you label these "energy beings" aliens, angles, yourself, or what ever is up to you. But it is very interesting. Be warned, once you unlock these psychic doorways you can not close them, and that can lead to many unsettling mindsets. Be strong though! Good Luck.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Only for the open minded and serious explorer
Review: I don't have much to add to the other reviews. I would recommend this book to ALIEN investigators and Out OF Body Experiencers (OBE). As for where is his evidence, you need to check it out yourself. He gives several references to begin your remote viewing abilities (OBE). Among these are transcendental meditation and Robert Monroe's books. Whether you label these "energy beings" aliens, angles, yourself, or what ever is up to you. But it is very interesting. Be warned, once you unlock these psychic doorways you can not close them, and that can lead to many unsettling mindsets. Be strong though! Good Luck.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Outstanding Book!
Review: I just finished reading this book. Dr. Brown is an ex-NSA Remote Viewer. He was engaged on a project to study the "so called" Gray Aliens. This was conducted over a 2 - 3 year period. He studied their history, motives, technology and other attributes. All test sequences were "BLIND" with only one or two front loaded. Interesting and very worthwhile. The only data published was the ones that were verified by other sources. It was easy and a fast read. Highly enjoyable and thought provoking. It certainly gives one a unique insight concerning aliens and ufos. I think this guy is right and this is the best book out there to actually make the issues about ufo's understandable and reasonable. This is a worthwhile purchase. I highly recommend it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fact or fiction? The fact is this is entertaining fiction...
Review: In 1996 a book called "Psychic Warrior", by David Morehouse, was published. This book exposed an alleged program within the CIA called "Stargate". The purpose of this program was to use psychics as spies via remote viewing, an ability where an individual travels across the barriers of time and space with their mind and gathers information. The story was startling, memorable, and quite believable as well.

In "Cosmic Voyage" Courtney Brown attempts to use his own remote viewing abilities to expose startling secrets and solve age-old mysteries, ranging from the origins of man on Earth, to speaking with Jesus Christ himself, to revealing the Secret of Life! Of course, there are plenty of alien tidbits in between.

These alien tidbits are what made me read this book in the first place, and they are probably the most believable part of this book. I have studied the alien abduction phenomenon for many years and read almost every book on the subject. The amazing thing about this phenomenon is that many of the books on the subject draw striking similarities with each other, almost like a puzzle; Cosmic Voyage seems to fill in some of the missing pieces. While it is certainly entertaining to think that Brown might be using actual psychic abilities and that the revelations in this book are true, there is no proof whatsoever to show that the author didn't just use the less-than-mystical abilities of plagiarism and imagination to fill the pages of this book. It is the aforementioned "Psychic Warrior" novel that gives me a glimmer of hope that this book might actually be true, at least in some parts.

Whether this book is actually true or not doesn't keep it from being an enjoyable read. It is a welcome relief from the all-too-standard alien abduction cases that reveal no information at all about the aliens themselves aside from vague physical descriptions. If this book is indeed fiction, Brown certainly thought up some very creative vignettes that make the reader think a little (I especially like his take on Mars - very smart, which makes it very believable).

Much like a doctor or police officer will enjoy a respective medical or crime drama, a ufologist will find "Cosmic Voyage" a breath of fresh air. It is a refreshing break from the same-old same-old, and it may even provide a new sense of inspiration. I look forward to reading Brown's sequel to this book. Highly recommended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fact or fiction? The fact is this is entertaining fiction...
Review: In 1996 a book called "Psychic Warrior", by David Morehouse, was published. This book exposed an alleged program within the CIA called "Stargate". The purpose of this program was to use psychics as spies via remote viewing, an ability where an individual travels across the barriers of time and space with their mind and gathers information. The story was startling, memorable, and quite believable as well.

In "Cosmic Voyage" Courtney Brown attempts to use his own remote viewing abilities to expose startling secrets and solve age-old mysteries, ranging from the origins of man on Earth, to speaking with Jesus Christ himself, to revealing the Secret of Life! Of course, there are plenty of alien tidbits in between.

These alien tidbits are what made me read this book in the first place, and they are probably the most believable part of this book. I have studied the alien abduction phenomenon for many years and read almost every book on the subject. The amazing thing about this phenomenon is that many of the books on the subject draw striking similarities with each other, almost like a puzzle; Cosmic Voyage seems to fill in some of the missing pieces. While it is certainly entertaining to think that Brown might be using actual psychic abilities and that the revelations in this book are true, there is no proof whatsoever to show that the author didn't just use the less-than-mystical abilities of plagiarism and imagination to fill the pages of this book. It is the aforementioned "Psychic Warrior" novel that gives me a glimmer of hope that this book might actually be true, at least in some parts.

Whether this book is actually true or not doesn't keep it from being an enjoyable read. It is a welcome relief from the all-too-standard alien abduction cases that reveal no information at all about the aliens themselves aside from vague physical descriptions. If this book is indeed fiction, Brown certainly thought up some very creative vignettes that make the reader think a little (I especially like his take on Mars - very smart, which makes it very believable).

Much like a doctor or police officer will enjoy a respective medical or crime drama, a ufologist will find "Cosmic Voyage" a breath of fresh air. It is a refreshing break from the same-old same-old, and it may even provide a new sense of inspiration. I look forward to reading Brown's sequel to this book. Highly recommended.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Brave new universe or tabloid charlatinism on overdrive?
Review: There is more than ample documentation in the scientific community that the "remote viewing" phenomenon both exists and yields verifiable results. Dr. Courtney Brown provides us a clear and fast moving account of how he has applied the remote viewing method developed by the U.S. millitary in his personal quest to bring humanity to terms with various races of extraterrestirals. Apparently the ETs are quite interested in us, and have been involved in our genetic and cultural affairs for eons. In fact, Adam and Eve were genetic scientists who are still alive, monitoring our progress, and of course biblical accounts of them are merely the outcome of a prehistoric culture trying to interpret the wiles of a more advanced civilization. Brown paints a vision of an expansive, scientifically-based "new age" cosmology. On one hand, he offers an incredibly optimistic and frightenning view of mankind's destiny, which will have to endure a global environmental collapse, already in its beginning stages. On the other hand, those grocery store tabloids would be hard pressed to come up with such outlandish claims, based on what we're asked to accept as empirical, "reproduceable" psychic observations. The focal point of Brown's writings is to call immediately for bolstering our feeble world government (the U.N.), so that we can extend diplomatic relations to a beleaguered cousin race who settled on Mars and suffered an ancient planetary catastrophe. In Brown's noble quest to determine the proper way humanity should extend aid to its ailing Martian cousins, and later several factions of "Greys," the powerful entities of Jesus and Budda provide guidance and advice. And yet, if you've read some of the UFO abduction literature, there's much in Cosmic Voyage that ties alleged alien genetic experimentation on humans and the apparently factual accounts of Roswell together into a coherent vision. That's the same basic cosmology underlying the X-Files mythos, now so dominant in Hollywood, and of course, according to Brown, this is no coincidence. ET's have apparently been influencing the writers of Star Trek episodes for some time, in prepping us for eventual membership in the real Galactic Federation. This is a must read for Star Trek fans, and serious enthusiasts of the UFO literature. If you're a fundamentalist Christian, you'll be convinced the devil is alive and well. If you're scientifically minded, there will be plenty of laughs, and perhaps a few cues to raise your curiosity about what the fringes of science are accomplishing in the areas of remote viewing and expanded human consciousness.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: What a Silly Book
Review: This book is neat to read because it is so foreign to almost anyone. I recommend it highly, mainly because it should help the open minded be more open minded. Even though this book is definately deist, it is what made me think a lot about God, leading me to my agnosticism today.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Read it with an open mind...But read it!
Review: This book is very interesting.....a little dry at times, but if read with an open mind it will definately open your mind further. I think it is a worthwhile read just solely for the fact that it will make you ponder things which you had not previously even considered.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: life its too big to own facts!
Review: this book of courtnys' should be viewed as a stepping stone, for the people who are broad minded enough, to accept the idea of life being less arrogant, to assume we are the only vershions of it> it is not stated that one should accept the literature as fact and to do so or not do so would be mearly an exersise in blind stupidity: as evident we did manage to travel at ubove the speed of sound let us "explore" the place "we" call home!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: life its too big to own facts!
Review: this book of courtnys' should be viewed as a stepping stone, for the people who are broad minded enough, to accept the idea of life being less arrogant, to assume we are the only vershions of it> it is not stated that one should accept the literature as fact and to do so or not do so would be mearly an exersise in blind stupidity: as evident we did manage to travel at ubove the speed of sound let us "explore" the place "we" call home!


<< 1 2 3 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates