![]() eye roll.) i assume this is supposed to build his credibility, to make us think that he doesn't just accept all of these stories at face value. but then other people (who sound an awful lot like the first unreliable people) are totally reliable and their accounts are true. Keel seems to go back and forth with his theories, where he says that some people are obviously crazy and are unreliable, so their visitations with creatures aren't true. (listening was more passive and i sped it up so it didn't take too long and i didn't have to pay too close attention.) i do think i could be made to be interested in these things, although i'm not a believer, but this book didn't do it. ![]() ![]() i have no idea why this even came to be on my to-be-read list, but i suspect that if i wasn't listening to it, it would have been the first book i ever stopped reading. ![]()
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