Call number
133 CUM
Status
Available
Call number
Pages
268
Description
The author claims the movement's supreme purpose: is to subvert our Judeo-Christian foundation and create a one-world order through a complex network of occult organizations.
Publication
Huntington House (1983), Edition: Revised Edition, 268 pages
ISBN
091031103X / 9780910311038
Collection
Subjects
User reviews
LibraryThing member paradoxosalpha
I acquired and read this book as a teenager, shortly after consuming Shea and Wilson's Illuminatus! The genuine paranoia and distortions in this purported expose were in some respects more hilarious than the psychedelic novel had been. The author's search for monsters in the closets of New Age
I'm not sure when I shed the copy from my library; it would have been a useful volume to retain as an example of its type of thinking.
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religion afforded me one advance in factual understanding: the historical centrality of the Theosophical movement to twentieth-century esoteric thought and organizing -- as a cultural influence, mind you, not the Palladist masterminds of Cumbey's totalizing imagination.I'm not sure when I shed the copy from my library; it would have been a useful volume to retain as an example of its type of thinking.
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LibraryThing member jocelynandersen
Constance Cumbey goes where no man has gone before in this one. A look into the New Age Movement that will make your hair stand on end.