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Rating: Summary: Spins a common thread through esoteric interests Review: If you have bookshelves at home covering sci-fi/fantasy/horror, mythology, AI, psychology, alchemy, animation, and semiotics, and know them only as "things I'm interested in" without being aware of any other common thread, Victoria Nelson just might convince you that you are interested in those things for the same reason she is, and that people throughout history have been: you are mapping a geography of human imagination, taking a journey that you can't help but pursue. Although the book is structured as a history of ideas, there's an autobiography being told, too, about a precocious, sensitive kid fleeing grad school to Hawaii (just as I did) only to return years later "to finish the PhD thesis I never wrote". Along the way, you'd find many great books and films you may never have heard of.
Rating: Summary: Spins a common thread through esoteric interests Review: If you have bookshelves at home covering sci-fi/fantasy/horror, mythology, AI, psychology, alchemy, animation, and semiotics, and know them only as "things I'm interested in" without being aware of any other common thread, Victoria Nelson just might convince you that you are interested in those things for the same reason she is, and that people throughout history have been: you are mapping a geography of human imagination, taking a journey that you can't help but pursue. Although the book is structured as a history of ideas, there's an autobiography being told, too, about a precocious, sensitive kid fleeing grad school to Hawaii (just as I did) only to return years later "to finish the PhD thesis I never wrote". Along the way, you'd find many great books and films you may never have heard of.
Rating: Summary: Great subject! Review: Nice way to connect wide range of topics. It has a typographical error or two, but it's a very good read.
Rating: Summary: At last -- a train wreck of my favorite things... Review: The problems I had with this book were all the more jarring because it connects some of my favorite subjects in a way that I never considered, but never quite brings it home. It's exciting to see such disparite threads woven together into a fairly broad picture of a ubiquitous neo-platonist 'underground' within mass-culture. Unfortunately, Nelson's scholarship often seems shallow or slap-dashed. The author frequently mentions things in passing that deserve deeper consideration in the context of her thesis. I found a few factual and referential errors that the editor(s) should have caught. And some of her examples don't really support her ideas very well, as her interpretations of a wide range of materials seem over-simplified. All of this results in a picture not much clearer than it already was in my head. On the positive side, her writing is friendly and inviting, unencumbered by academic aggression or silly neologisms. I would recommend this to people who have never given much thought to the perversity inherent in puppets, golems and other post-human constructions of experience. I gave an extra star for the book's title.
Rating: Summary: Demons, Fairies, and Truth Crushed to Earth will Rise Again Review: This book is amazing. The most fascinating book of nonfiction I have read in 10 years. It will definitely develop a strong cult audience, although the author/scholar maintains a truly balanced and studious examination of the phenomenon at the heart of the book. This is one of those books that will almost make the nonfiction bestseller list, if nobody in marketing pushes it. If they want to push it -- well, I can imagine all the die-hard realists who will foam at the mouth. But they are a pretty fuddy-duddy bunch of worn-out hasbeens anyhow, and you will see why when you sink your teeth into this one. This book answers a lot of serious and critical questions concerning the transcendental imagination and its underestimated and ignored role in our pragmatic culture. If you have often thought that the Academics who rule the roost (and the brain-washed editors who determine which novels will and will not be nominated for the Pulitzer) have lost their pathway to the great darkness which holds volumes of helpful and fairly eternal light, Victoria Nelson will put place your nearly correct, incomplete thoughts into a realm of rich and understandable meaning. This book is a well-thought out prophesy of the richer literature to come. Prepare to enter the unexplainable, miraculous, demonic realms of subject matter upheld as most significant by Platonic thinkers, who are by far more adventurous than that other bunch.
Rating: Summary: Demons, Fairies, and Truth Crushed to Earth will Rise Again Review: This book is amazing. The most fascinating book of nonfiction I have read in 10 years. It will definitely develop a strong cult audience, although the author/scholar maintains a truly balanced and studious examination of the phenomenon at the heart of the book. This is one of those books that will almost make the nonfiction bestseller list, if nobody in marketing pushes it. If they want to push it -- well, I can imagine all the die-hard realists who will foam at the mouth. But they are a pretty fuddy-duddy bunch of worn-out hasbeens anyhow, and you will see why when you sink your teeth into this one. This book answers a lot of serious and critical questions concerning the transcendental imagination and its underestimated and ignored role in our pragmatic culture. If you have often thought that the Academics who rule the roost (and the brain-washed editors who determine which novels will and will not be nominated for the Pulitzer) have lost their pathway to the great darkness which holds volumes of helpful and fairly eternal light, Victoria Nelson will put place your nearly correct, incomplete thoughts into a realm of rich and understandable meaning. This book is a well-thought out prophesy of the richer literature to come. Prepare to enter the unexplainable, miraculous, demonic realms of subject matter upheld as most significant by Platonic thinkers, who are by far more adventurous than that other bunch.
Rating: Summary: Ground down Review: This is a book that at times reads a bit like a Ph.D. thesis, but's it really much better than that. If you've ever entertained the idea that popular films such as The Matrix, or TV shows (X-Files) might be saying something interesting about ideas in today's world at some deeper level, but you're not really sure what it is, this is the book to read. Nelson shows how Robocop, the Terminator and so on are just the latest puppets standing in for a certain way of thinking about the world, even a 'religious' way of thinking, that in fact is very ancient in Western society. It's been driven into eclipse by our modern, scientific, and materialistic society, but becomes strangely ascendant the moment we walk into a movie theatre, read a Stephen King novel, or listen to a conversation about an 'interesting' movie at the water cooler. Why? Well, buy Nelson's book. I could imagine this book being misread as an attack on conventional religion, but it really has nothing to do with that. I could also imagine that some readers, not accustomed to slogging their way through terms such as 'Platonism', 'demiurge,' and so on, might miss out on finer moments in Nelson's work, when she casts off the robes of the academic (which don't really suit her, anyway) and speaks in plain language about her ideas. In any case, this is a fine book well worth a careful reading in my opinion.
Rating: Summary: Heavy reading, but interesting Review: This is a clinical look at cults and religions, but is VERY heavy reading. Not a light and fluffy book that you can flip through...or would want to.
Rating: Summary: Heavy reading, but interesting Review: This is a clinical look at cults and religions, but is VERY heavy reading. Not a light and fluffy book that you can flip through...or would want to.
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