Paola is a most thought provoking interviewerMay 15, 2007 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Paola Harris asks the hard questions and has a deep feeling for her subject and a clear concise manner with those great minds she has gathered to shed some light on an often murky and somtimes diliberately misinformed body of evidence. You will come away feeling refreshed and hopeful haveing cut through alot of the BS regarding the ET phenomena. I'm currently reading her latest, Exopolitics, How does one speak to a ball of light? and find it moving in the same strong and compelling manner.
Excellent Book!!!June 21, 2006 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Paola Harris writes a wonderful book and well worth reading and owning. The broad scope covered is excellent. Her devotion to Michael Wolf Kruvant is unfortunate. Michael was sincere and intellegent and it appears because of his mental off-balance was used by the secret government to feed us mis-information. Michael Wolf exposed This is a one hour interview with Michael Wolf Kruvant's brother, Ron Kruvant on January 19, 2008.
Connecting the dots fails to connectFebruary 26, 2006 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
This is the most disconnected rambling thing I've read in a long time. A series of interviews with a lot of people, many of whom I've never heard of, in question and answer format, it was a real battle to get to the last page. Ms. Harris tries (in vane) to connect subjects that have nothing in common from UFO's to remote viewing to ESP.
Muddled and untrueJune 5, 2005 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
This is a terrible book with much false information. In particular the section on Michael Kruvant is pure mythology. Kruvant perpetrated an enormous hoax and suckered Harris right in. Kruvant was a schizophrenic man who made up a totally false life, claiming to have multiple university degrees while in reality he was a college drop out, and was treated in several mental hospitals. He lived in a fantasy world but was very charming and quite intelligent and could be quite persuasive. I knew him personally and have followed the fantastic controversies he stirred up with much amusement. I'm sure in his saner moments, he also must have been quite amused at the fuss he had stirred up. If the other sections of the book are as badly researched as the Kruvant story, then this book should be move into the fiction category.
Harris is a very clear headed reporterMarch 18, 2005 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
I recieved my issue the month it was published and read the reports and interviews carefully. She pretty much reserves judgement and searches for answers in the 'old school' style of inquiry. She does not make pretentious claims at all and many of her subjects are not the ones everyone hears about. Mrs. Haris knows many UFO/Alien researchers and claimants and presents interesting materiel to the reader.
While I personally am not convinced about every story I hear and believe many stories are distorted with sociological or political 'filters' the human mind often experiences, I do think the book is a great addition to a genuine "What are UFO/Aliens" book collection. I have to rate this book towards the top of the list.
Mrs. Harris clearly asks important questions and has a wide range of knowledge to accurately report on what she is hearing. Reporting without undue 'interpetation' and bias is a crucial process in critical analysis of the UFO phenomena.