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Darklore Volume 2

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Darklore is a journal of exceptional observations, hidden history, the paranormal and esoteric science. Bringing together some of the top researchers and writers on topics from outside of mainstream science and history, Darklore will challenge your preconceptions by revealing the strange dimensions veiled by consensus reality. Featuring contributions from Stephen E. Braude Ph.D, Nick Redfern, Jon Downes, Blair Blake, Theo Paijmans, Michael Tymn, Greg Taylor and many others, Volume 2 of Darklore offers only the best writing and research from the most respected individuals in their fields. In Darklore Volume 2 you'll find discussions of subjects such as the occult underpinnings of modern rock music, the origins of the Illuminati, hallucinogens and witchcraft, DMT and the occult, and much more. Find out more about the book - including free sample articles - at the Darklore website: darklore.dailygrail.com

272 pages, Paperback

First published November 1, 2008

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Greg Taylor

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
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439 reviews
December 24, 2012
Another entertaining, wildly eclectic DARKLORE volume. I suppose I should say up front that I don't read this series because I necessarily believe what the contributors claim (nor do I necessarily disbelieve!); rather, I'm looking for the kind of imaginative pleasure I get out of reading good weird fiction.

In this batch, I particularly enjoyed Theo Paijman's essay, "The Dark Cohorts". Paijman's never fails to deliver striking ideas and images, and I wish he were more prolific. Here he excels with a vision evoked by his reading of Charles Fort: ". . . one sometimes is overcome by the sudden visions of unbelievable vistas and fathomless, black abysses where giant, incomprehensible artifacts slowly and blindly grind away aeon after aeon, or manifest themselves briefly and shatteringly. . . " That's better than anything Fort himself ever wrote. I'm also intrigued by his notion that Fort produced his writings while in a state of trance: that would certainly explain his incoherent ideas and atrocious prose style.

Number two for me is Blair MacKenzie Blake's "DMT and Magic". How can one not like an essay with gives us a secret ancient Egyptian cult which practiced necrophagy as a means of gaining enlightenment?

I am less taken with the authors who are inclined toward mechanistic or prosaic explanations of the uncanny: 'The Emperor' could surely come up with a livelier explanation for his preternatural fogs than seismic activity and extraterrestrial probes, while Mike Jay is a real killjoy, even if his exposure of the roots of our Illuminati fixation is a useful and interesting bit of historiography. There aren't any real duds here.
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