Hitler's Suppressed and Still-secret Weapons, Science and Technology
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Average customer review:Product Description
Nazi technology extended far further than has generally been acknowledged, in fact to almost unfathomable levels. Yet conventional historians have absolutely failed to provide an adequate picture of the technology, and weaponry of the Third Reich. Was it government intervention, peer scepticism or just plain intellectual laziness which caused these historians to stop digging? Henry Stevens takes the story to the mat, providing a glimpse into German research of those times relying mostly on the governments own reports. Some were declassified just or this book. Stevens also uses direct Nazi sources, summarised and translated in this book. Now we know what spooked the Allies in the closing months of World War II and why they were in such a panic to win quickly - they had assembled mind-blowing intelligence reports of Nazi development of supermetals, electric guns, and ray weapons that could stop the engines of Allied aircraft - in addition to highly feared X-ray and laser weaponry. Then there were the bombs. Contained in this book are reports of structured bombs of nipolit, N-stoff bombs, cold bombs, oxygen bombs which could destroy all life, atomic bombs and rumours of the mysterious molecular bomb. The true history of the fuel-air bomb is revealed by our own military. There is even a probability that the SS black alchemists of the Third Reich were experimenting with red mercury bomb technology. Very exotic technologies are also discussed including German experiments in time, Very fusion reactions, zero point energy and travel in deep space. The reasons for the scientific flowering in Germany during this period are discussed in terms of a completely different scientific paradigm shared by these scientists and how it relates to a unified view of gravity, matter and energy.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #24704 in Books
- Published on: 2007-04-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 334 pages
Customer Reviews
Rubbish????
I hate to disagree with previous reviewers but I found this book to be pretty dreadful.
It is riddled with errors (typos, missing words, nonsense sentences, grammatical errors). Although I didn't count them, I reckon there is an average of one error per page. For me, it meant trying to read the book was irritating.
I have less of a problem with the content although in several places it seems that the author has very little scientific knowledge which makes his explanations poor.
The author also seems to lack any ability to critically appraise any of the "evidence" he presents.
The book would be more credible had it been written by a someone with better scientific knowledge and had a good editor been employed.
Interesting information poorly presented
Perhaps I was spoiled by the Joseph Farrell books 'Reich of the Black Sun' and'Brotherhood of the Bell'. Henry Stevens did a reasonable job with his book on German UFOs, but this comes over almost as an afterthought (which, according to the author, it may actually have been, originally...).
Yes the information is quite interesting, and yes it is often difficult to quote sources. But his typos are too frequent and very annoying, and his written style is almost 'careless'. It comes over as something between a dictionary of German secret technology and a thriller, but does neither of these categories sufficient justice.
If the reader is a beginner in this or wants more or less just the bare bones, this may be a satisfactory read. Otherwise, J.P.Farrell is much better on all counts.
An eye opener
Well what can I say about this book that the previous reviewer has not said already, well a lot of the topics covered are already in the public domain although they are not all in one place so this is a good book for those interested in such things. The author has a bit of a beef with the freedom of information act as well as the US government that anyone who has tried to get anything under the FOI will clearly understand. There are a number of typos in the text but these do not distract from the overall story greatly. Overall this is a good book to start your own research into these topics as there are loads of references to seek out or it just makes very interesting if sometimes controversial, worrying reading. The author has done a great job with the subject and the chapter / subject order works very well. You may not agree with his conclusions but it does beg the question "what was really going on"?



