Jim Benz showed me this book back in the late seventies when he still lived in "The Rogers Park Ridge"--an apartment building in this Chicago neighborhood which, for a while, had four units occupied by old high school friends from Park Ridge, Illinois. I thumbed through it, adminiring the pictures. Years later I found a used copy of the thing in a bookstore and, remembering that evening, purchased it.
This is a volume that Mike Miley would cite as an example of "high weirdness". On the one hand, it is a well-told account of the history of the Great Pyramid and of its interpretations and interpreters. This is fun enough. On the other hand, Tompkins, former spy and coauthor of The Secret Life of Plants, sifts through the theories, finds some he likes and formulates his own interpretation of the structure. His conclusions are, well, weird.