The Legend of Starcrash
D**A
Interesting read
I love all Dolores Cannonβs books.
T**Y
Fascinating!
To walk back through time with an individual who lived long ago is absolutely fascinating. The recounting of this past life rings true on so many levels. The fact that the young woman who lived this past life is not in the least interested but caught up in her social life, as young people are, just validates the truth of the story for me. Dolores Cannon is a true historian of Mother Earth and the Universe. Highly recommend this book to all interested in our history.
M**N
One person's past life collage presented as fact...
I firmly believe in all the precepts of this book (aliens, past past lives, reincarnation, a genetic link between Native American tribes and star people), and I really enjoyed "the Three Waves of Volunteers" by this same author. However, this book was nothing like it it and, frankly, it was so bad that I find myself questioning the author's information entirely. This was literally ONE person's past life regression, NOT a collection of regression stories, which I would have considered more credible. And the details DO NOT support many of the authors assumptions. Let me explain...First of all, the author starts by assuring us that this (one, first time) subject is super-reliable, because they go into such a deep trance that they literally become their past life. Personally, I don't think any level of trance makes any subject 100% reliable. That's why I would expect a variety of sources to provide overlapping evidence. But I was willing to play along...The story begins with a solitary hunter, living in a seemingly medieval village, with thatched and clay (rare up north, btw) coated homes, wearing European clothes, eating with wooden spoons, but practicing a "Native American" (pagan, earth-based, shamanic, found on all continents) spirituality. They have apparently lost all memory of technology from their ET ancestors, who could apparently navigate the unfathomable distances in space by manipulating space/time, but could not salvage enough materials from their stranded craft to create a meager water turbine to create rudimentary power... or relocate their children to a more hospitable climate. The hunter says their village relies on wheat, which originated in Turkey, and he somehow has knowledge of horses, which were introduced to North America by the Spanish fairly recently, but yet he has no idea what a dog sounds like. So what time period is he living in, exactly??? And where??? At some point we are told told by the author that they are "clearly" on the North American continent, around the Arctic Circle...Which conveys a disappointing lack of understanding of the geographical region, culture, and climate, both pre and post ice age, as well as the movement of Native people across the continent. Are we to assume these people were simply abandoned by their ET parents and absorbed completely by the incoming, human tribes? Without a single cultural or agricultural carry over over whatsoever? Wheat, anyone?And that's when I returned the book. This book is, in my opinion, one person making sense (a narrative) out of a collage of numerous past life memories. It's certainly not substantial enough to hang a historical claim on. I wish the author would have taken the time to seek out more subjects with similar memories before publishing this book.
A**R
Great read!
Loved this book!
M**G
Interesting Read
This book was an interesting mix of long ago history blended with insight into extraterrestrial influence. Much food for thought.
B**X
Who Came First, the Chicken or the Egg, OR...
Dolores Cannon's warm and inquisitive, yet non-obstinate approach in dealing with her subjects and their spirit entities under regressive hypnosis gives much credence to the integrity of the subject matter. This book stages the probable seeding and origin of our ancestors, and WOW!, is it a mindbender. Tuin, who is the main character and tribal hunter for the commune, delivers interesting insights to the societal structure and specialized importance each member's responsibility brings to the tribal commune. In a naive and innocent manner, Tuin relates his adventuresome and somewhat rascally personality within a warm and caring community, which in a primitive way appears more advanced and evolved than our current existence.That's not all! The latter part of the book, Dolores explores Tuin's higher spiritual nature, giving a sophisticated glimpse at the unfolding of human history. For those of you who have interest in the migration of man to North America and the Native American role in that perspective, this is a MUST book. Why, we even get a glimpse into to the effect of the great prehistorical asteroid hit on earth. Great, easy, and believable reading. An opportunity to enhance one's enlightenment.
U**S
Historical research at its best, stuff you won't find elsewhere!
The story about the starcrash legend is so believable and rings a bell of truth and yet so much more amazing than the boring hollywood UFO movies. I don't understand why they cannot make a movie based on such stories which sound far more real. I don't like movies showing aliens as if they were so evil and we are Gods in comparison!Dolores cannon's research is so much more fascination and as the saying goes, "Fact is stranger than fiction". Such things cannot be imagined by human minds, we can only come up with useless stuff that involves fighting, fighting and more fighting. Here's a story of peace and harmony, how much more beautiful life can be living in harmony.I wonder if some of the avatar concepts were inspired from this book. But avatar for me, failed to create an impact. It could have been so much more interesting.I love Dolores Cannon's work. She's amazing. I wish she would write more books like this, of course depending on what she unearths. But so far, out of the four I read, this is the best book of her. But others are good too and not to be missed.
M**X
How old is the human race?!!!!
I find this story leaving me with a lot to think about. I have read so many other books by Doloris and love them all. This book left me really wondering about the true story of how the human race came about and now I see a little more of the puzel to how we ended up like we are. Just look at our world situations right down to our own lifestyle. We could learn a lot from our real history to change our future for the better.
M**.
Probably not the author's best book.
I recently bought a number of Dolores Cannon's books and this is the first book I have read so far . I bought this book ( and the rest ) as a result of the many favourable reviews the author has received on Amazon . However I was suprisingly disappointed with this one and found it quite boring in many places . For me its not the worst book in the world but I am sure there are a lot of better Dolores Cannon books that one can buy .
J**.
Starcrash
An intriguing book, unsure if it's all true, but you never know.
J**Y
another point of view
To imagine being stranded in an environment totally unlike your own and learning how to survive and cling onto and preserve precious knowledge and technology taken for granted over the centuries, requires food for thought and ingenuity. Not to mention integrating into the local population without being annihilated for being different takes some skill doesn't, it. Well what if this were a true story but thousands of years ago. The evidence of such,buried just waiting for the right archeological team to unearth and piece together clues of these people. Just imagine how exciting a find that would prove to be. Then read Starcrash with those thoughts in mind, hopefully with an open mind
A**N
Starcrash
Another gift from Dolores Cannon, who can access ancient history and information that no one else can. It tells of a star ship that crashed in Canada many millennia ago, and how the survivors influenced the existing primitive inhabitants, interbreeding with them to create the fore-runners of the American Indian we know today.
B**K
A gentle introduction to Dolores Cannon's work
Easy to read. Start at the beginning and read right through to the end. Whether you believe in reincarnation or not, it makes you think about the way of life for our ancestors all those thousands of years ago... and the origins of so many of our myths & legends.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
3 days ago