| Publishers Weekly
Review of John E. Mack's Passport to the Cosmos
Here is a fascinating foray into an exotic world. From Harvard psychiatry
professor and Pulitzer prize-winning author John Mack comes a second
book (after Abduction) based on accounts by people who claim
to have been abducted by aliens. While he fudges the question of whether
the aliens are real in a strictly material sense, he insists
that the experience is real for the abductees, in the way
that shamans' spiritual journeys are real to them; indeed, a couple
of his interviewees are shamans. He focuses on the newly emerging spiritual
importance of the alleged abductees' message. Their reports, Mack believes,
reveal much about human culture and the future of the human race. In
extensive interviews with Mack, those who claim to have been abducted,
report that the aliens are especially motivated by questions of ecological
destruction, and that they may even be survivors of a destroyed civilization
seeking to breed hybrid children with humans to ensure the survival
of both the human race and their own. Overwhelmingly, the abductees
state that the aliens visit Earth to warn us that our cavalier tree-cutting,
water-polluting, trash-dumping habits will have dire consequences if
we do not change our ways. Abductees are left with not only a profound
caring for the environment, but with a sense that they have encountered
creatures sent by whatever power rules the universe. They particularly
find that their experiences resonate with Native American religions.
This discussion leads into what is possibly the most intriguing section
of the book, the examination of sex between humans and aliens
great sex, by numerous accounts. But as a serious investigation into
a mystifying experience, Mack's account poses questions begging for
answers.
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