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Hardcover Above Black: Project Preserve Destiny: Insider Account of Alien Contact and Government Cover-Up Book

ISBN: 0966097807

ISBN13: 9780966097801

Above Black: Project Preserve Destiny: Insider Account of Alien Contact and Government Cover-Up

ABOVE BLACK documents the true life experience of a USAF member, while working for the National Security Agency (NSA) as an electronic intelligence specialist. The book relates, in the first person,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

$20.39
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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Style does NOT equal substance

I have a huge collection of ufo related books , from mid fifties James McDonald stuff through Jaques Vallee and J. Allen Hynek,and on to Stanton Freidman and the beginning of the whole "Majestic 12" rumor,on through to the early abduction accounts of Betty and Barney Hill, "Incident At Exeter" by Fowler ,on through to all the Streiber and Budd Hopkins stuff,continuing to the really "way-out" things like Ingo Swanns "Penetration". I have all the books on the subject by Harvard psychiatrist John Mack, Steven Greer's "Disclosure Project" books, Richard Dolan's "Ufo's And The National Security State" , and on through to tangentially ufo related books like Nick Cooks "The Hunt For Zero Point Energy" , Joe McMoneagles "Mind Trek" , and "The Excalibur Briefing" by Thomas Bearden. I also have all the Richard T. Hall books , the Jim Marrs books etc. etc. etc.........HERE'S MY POINT ; if you have read any of the just cited items , GET ABOVE BLACK. Many, many little details in Above Black dovetail very nicely with and corroborate things I have previously read. It's a great book to ADD to your collection. If , however , you've only read 1 or 2 pop-culture ufo type books and put the whole subject on an "lastest tidbits about Paris Hilton or Tommy Lee" timewaster level , this book will mean nothing to you. As another reviewer said , Above Black DOES help connect some dots....but ONLY if you already have a deep knowledge of the subject. Newbies and thrill-seekers and fundmentalists whether scientific , or religious....stay away ! This book will only cause you to thrash around in confusion even more....and you don't need another ulcer ;-) Bob Welch

An insider to a hidden world

I read this book and hung on every word. Dan Sherman has something to say that everyone who has an interest in how their government works with aliens, should read. The people who dismiss this book quote Dan's military superior's deriding remarks. I find this telling. Not one person who reads Dan's book will have any doubt of the disinformation campaign that must surely follow his accounts in the military with aliens. Most everyone has given this book the most stars because it is a believable and a good book. It is written with a straight forward prose and what he says is chilling. The government wanted technology and in return they turned a blind eye to abductions. However, the abductions became so plentiful there was some disease amongst the military but there was nothing they could do about it. Everyone should read this first hand account and sit stunned at what Dan has to say.

Believe the Truth or dismiss it and believe the lie

This book is believable. He has a blunt writing style. Dan Sherman was not trying to write an episode to a sci-fi low budget TV show, he was telling about his experiences in the Air Force communicating with aliens. I could tell that this was a true story when I was reading the part of when he tried to describe how he communicated with the aliens. He had much difficulty describing it. I suggest you read the book. The reader familiar with the whole UFO deal will enjoy the part about "black" projects. I think that black projects are used to discount the ET explanation for things, such as saying it was a military aircraft not a UFO (when sometimes it is a UFO), which I believe is enforced in this book. Good book, will help you connect some dots.

Presents facts, and does not speculate or make anything up.

Above Black is about a guy who worked for the NSA as an "IC" (Intuitive Communicator). The book follows his journey from the military through his IC training, and to his time as a telepathic communicator (with aliens). And lastly, his discovery and reason for wanting to get out.I saw there are a couple of negative reviews of this book, which I strictly think is very unjust. This book is a real story. To those people who would give this book a bad review, and to those who do not yet "believe" in aliens, consider this...Statistically, the more educated a person is, the more likely they are to "believe". This book is a factual and non-sensationalistic account of a man's career in a job most of us would never guess even existed, and an account of something Dan Sherman (author) has had the opportunity to do that most of us never will.I conclude:For those of you who do already "believe", then this book is for you (albiet it's quite short, only 150 pages). But for those of you who are still highly sceptical and have not ALREADY read other books on the topic, this book is NOT for you, it's way above your head.

Above Black is gut-level convincing.

If you're expecting a mind-altering, Strieber-esque tour of the alien psyche, this book won't do it for you. It will, however, kidnap you, test your faith in the myth of an unchallenged national security system, lock you in a guarded underground bunker with nothing but a blank computer screen in front of you, and leave you -- not as alone as you wish -- all in the space of a long evening's read.A former USAF tech/soldier, Sherman writes in a hybrid military report style, laced with imaginative acronyms which could only come from the stolid minds of agents at the highest NSA security levels. But it's his "only the facts" style that evokes a gut-level belief in what he's talking about, the mundane description of security measures, the first-person accounts of information given by his supervisors, the midnight "comms" with unseen aliens. He speculates little as to the alien's agenda, he draws no concrete conclusions, and he unmercifully leaves us with our imagination running akimbo on many of the issues.Sherman's Above Black is uncompromising, revealing, and disturbing -- Extreme Reading.
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