Assortment -
Abbreviations Used
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Code
Description
Price
Addressing Specific Claims
See Also:
UFO Skeptics - 14 titles For books skeptical of UFO and alien claims.
lochness
The Loch Ness Monster: The Evidence
$14.95
book1
uri
The Truth About Uri Geller
$20.95
1book
bermuda
The Bermuda Triangle Mystery Solved
$16.95
book1
stiebing
Ancient Astronauts, Cosmic Collisions
$19.95
book1
crystal
Crystal Power: The Ultimate Placebo Effect
$19.95
1book
miracle
Looking for a Miracle
$24.26
book2
Miracle_au
Looking for a Miracle (audio book, 1-2 weeks) Read by the author. One of the rare cases where the book-on-tape version is cheaper than the printed book. - Also listed on Looking for a Miracle .
$17.95
std
dyingtolive
Dying to Live: Near Death Experiences
$25.95
2book
scamsfrombeyond
Scams from the Great Beyond: How to Make Easy Money Off of ESP, Astrology, UFOs, Crop Circles, Cattle Mutilations, Alien Abductions, Atlantis, Channelling, and Other New Age Nonsense
$20.00
book1
randiencyclo
An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural
$14.95
book1.5
MakSenAst
Making Sense of Astrology (new hc) By Ronny Martens and Tim Trachet. 1998, Prometheus Books, 276pp. A skeptical book on astrology. "The authors provide a unique combination of historical information and recent scientific work to allow readers to make their own intelligent and informed judgment about the value of astrology." (7/15/99) - Also listed on Astrology .
$23.95
book1.5
PsychicMaf
The Psychic Mafia (new trpb) By M. Lamar Keene and Allen Spraggett and Ray Hyman and William V. Rauscher. 1976 (1997), Prometheus Books, 172pp. "M. Lamar Keene, who came to be known as the "Prince of the Spiritualists," enjoyed the riches and fame the accompany the life of a sought-after medium. He claimed to be clairvoyant and to produce objects out of thin air. He conducted seances in which participants talke with and even touched the dead. Yet every miracle Keene performed was a fraud, a lie, and a trick played on willing, gullible victims. In this powerful and brutally honest book, Keen exposes the secrets of the seance room, including ghostly apparitions, floating trumpets, "spirit sex," and other tricks used by mediums to exploit believers. Originally published in 1976 and long out of print, this classic work is a fast-paced autobiographical account of a confessed charlatan who was one of the first mediums to admit his deception. The Psychic Mafia offers an incredible look inside the world of fraudulent spiritualists by a man who rose to the top of a tawdry and lucrative business before he chose to renounce it all." (7/15/99) - Also listed on Profiles of Psychics .
$16.95
book1
aliensinamerica
Aliens in America: Conspiracy Cultures from Outerspace to Cyberspace
$15.95
book1
Hystories
Hystories: Hystorical Epidemics and Modern Media (new trpb) By Elaine Showalter.
1998, Columbia University Press, 224pp.
"Showalter takes on the history of mass cultural hysteria, from witch
hunts to mesmerism, and discusses today's versions--ranging from
chronic fatigue or Gulf War Syndrome to recovered memories--and the
attendant publicity."
(4/28/99)
$14.95
book1
WeirdThings
Why People Believe Weird Things: Pseudoscience, Superstition, and other Confusions of Our Time (new trpb) By Michael Shermer.
1997, Freeman, 306pp.
"UFO abductions...television psychics...creationism...Holocaust
denial. Faced with the rapid changes and anxiety of modern life, many
people are turning to the alluring comforts of pseudoscience and the
occult. In Why People Believe Weird Things, science historian Mic hael
Shermer, the publisher of Skeptic magazine and director of the
Skeptics Society, explores the very human reasons we find supernatural
phenomena, conspiracy theories, and cults so appealing. Shermer also
reveals the darker and more fearful side of wishful thinking,
including Holocaust denial, creationism, the recovered memory
movement, alien abduction experiences, the satanic ritual abuse scare
and other modern witch crazes, extreme Afrocentrism, and ideologies of
racial superiority. A compelling and often disturbing portrait of our
immense capacity for self-delusion, Why People Believe Weird Things
celebrates the scientific spirit and the joy to be found in rationally
exploring the world's greatest mysteries even if many of the questions
remain unanswered. Foreword by Stephen Jay Gould."
(4/19/99)
$14.95
book1
ApocPretty
Apocalypse Pretty Soon: Travels in End-Time America (new hc) By Alex Heard.
1999, W.W. Norton, 360pp, B+W photos throughout.
"Over a ten-year period,
intrepid cultural travleler Alex Heard has been sojourning among America's
most intensely religious and political believers -- sometimes distrubed,
sometimes euphoric, usually bizarre, and very occasionally deadly groups
who bring their own all-American spin to the biblical idea of apocalypse.
Among the amazing cast of character encountered: A UFO cult whose members
look forward to the mass landing of angelic space-brothers in 2001;
trembling New Age penitents who fear that our polluted planet is bent
on taking highly conscious revenge; a born-again Christian determined, on God's orders,
to carry a 12-foot cross accross every nation on earth; life-extensionists
convinced that if they can only live long enough science will make sure
they can life forever; separatists attempting to construct their onw man-made
utopian countries far from the shores of corrupt and repressive AMerica;
Bible literalists studiously preparing for the rapture;
and a rich assortment of many other credulous, paranoid, and/or ecstatic fringe
dwellers."
(5/19/99)
$24.95
book2
ExtraDelusions
Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds (new trpb) By Charles Mackey.
1841 (1995), Tree Rivers Press, 740pp.
"A complete repackaging of the classic work about grand-scale madness, major schemes and bamboozlement--and the universal human susceptibility to all three--this informative, funny collection encompasses a broad range of manias and deceptions, from witch burnings to the Great Crusades to the prophecies of Nostradamus."
(4/20/99)
$14.00
book2
believingmagic
Believing in Magic: The Psychology of Superstition
$22.50
book1.5