"The Extraterrestrial Species Almanac is the go to book on life in the universe."-- George Noory, National Talk Show Host, Coast to Coast AMDiscover who the aliens are – the benevolent ones and those who mean us harm – and what they want from us. Here is the ultimate field guide to the 82 extraterrestrial species that populate the universe. Fully illustrated throughout.
This is the ultimate field guide to the 82 extraterrestrial species that populate the universe. ET enthusiast Craig Campobasso explores the origins, physical characteristics, technological and consciousness abilities, dimensional capacities, belief systems, and cosmic agendas of each of the species.
The species fall into two 1) benevolent races, which function as the guardians of humanity, whose goals include helping people overcome duality, healing, and protecting; and 2) malevolent races, which are responsible for abductions, cloning, and ultimately domination.
This intergalactic expose will entertain all those interested in UFOs, aliens, ETs. Sci-fi and fantasy fans of the Marvel universe; Star Trek, Star Wars, and other popular TV shows like Ancient Aliens; Roswell, and Project Blue Book are prime targets for this book that delves deep into who the real extraterrestrials are and what they want with the people of Earth.
Multiple award-winning filmmaker and Emmy-nominated casting director Craig Campobasso was fifteen when he started in the entertainment business. His young acting career was off to a great start; he landed his first national commercial for McDonald’s chicken sandwich, and spoke his first line of dialogue to Tuesday Weld in a MOW.
After graduating high school at age seventeen, Craig went to work behind-the-scenes on such blockbuster film classics as Frank Herbert’s Dune directed by David Lynch; and two Arnold Schwarzenegger movies Conan The Destroyer and Total Recall. He began his casting career on Steven Spielberg’s Amazing Stories. He received an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Casting for a Series on David E. Kelley’s Picket Fences. Craig’s casting career spans three decades.
Craig’s mother Marie Donna King Campobasso told him from the time she was pregnant with him, that she knew he would become a writer. He fulfilled that prophecy when he was twenty-six, after he experienced a life-changing spiritual awakening. That’s when The Autobiography of an ExtraTerrrestrial Saga book series was born. His passion is to write stories that provoke the reader to think, to raise their consciousness, to expand their mind about Creation, while still entertaining in the Hollywood tradition.
Craig directed, wrote and produced the short film Stranger at the Pentagon, which was adapted from the popular UFO book authored by the late Dr. Frank E. Stranges. After production, the short film collected accolades. In September 2014, it won Best Sci-Fi film at the Burbank International Film Festival, selling out all 275 seats—a first for the festival. In 2015, it won a Remi Award at the Worldfest Houston International Film Festival for Best Sci-Fi Short.
Craig has appeared on many radio shows, including Coast to Coast AM with George Noory twice. He has also been a guest on the Open Minds talk show, with Regina Meredith; and two episodes of Beyond Belief, hosted by George Noory on www.Gaia.com. Craig has also appeared on The History Channel’s Ancient Aliens, where Giorgio A. Tsoukalos is the main Ancient Astronaut theorist.
“The Autobiography of an ExtraTerrestrial Saga: The Huroid Revolution and Other Warring Creatures” is the fourth book in the series.
Easily the best of its genre. If you have any interest in fringe UFO/Starseed beliefs, this book is the perfect walkthrough in plain language.
I'm highly amused by the disclaimer on the back page: "This is a must have for all those interested in UFOs, aliens, and ET's, and fans of the Marvel universe, Star Wars, and Star Trek." This book has absolutely nothing to do with any movie and television show. The people who contributed to this book really believe that multiple alien races are actually here on Earth, right now, contributing to or controlling human culture. This book is the perfect synthesis of the Urantia Book, the Law of One/Ra Material, and multiple other works of UFOology, channeled or otherwise. It is the integration of human spirituality with expanded horizons.
Entries on various races can be repetitive, but the repetitions themselves provide insight into this developing religion. Earth humans are on the cusp of being admitted to a universe thriving with extraterrestrial human civilizations, the vast majority of which are quite loving and benevolent. These humans are at war with dragons, reptilians and grey aliens from the Orion constellation. Dragons can appear quite fearsome, except in comparison to the heavenly hosts of Archangel Michael and the Paradise Father. And of course, having a fearsome appearance is no guarantee that the mind and spirit is beastly. Even if it is not true, it is enormously psychologically satisfying. But the thing I'm having trouble with is that it may very well be completely true.
An excellent read for anyone who's willing to learn
This was an excellent read by far 1 of my favorite books Confirmed already a load of questions I had in my mind I just wished there were some way they could have stated on what these different extra rolls ate For their food cause I do believe they partake and drinking blood . I had a series of 7 years that I had experiences that I've documented all the only thing I haven't done is gone to get Hypnotized I'm gonna sound weird but I'm scared I'm gonna I'm gonna sound weird but I'm scared I'm an old lady now when these things happen to me it was back in the late 1980's. After having these experiences I for some reason became a vegetarian And was more conscientious about our earth And got heavily into Meditation To help raise my Consciousness higher Thank you for writing this book And again it's an excellent read for anyone Who's willing to read it with an open mind
Interesting but I'm rather sceptical.....where did he get all this information ? plus descriptions, supposedly accurate drawing of the aliens and their missions etc..... I do believe there are other entities from other planets/dimensions as I and my husband have personally observed at least 10+ over the years of different kinds, no way were they ours because of the speeds and manoeuvres they have all made. We live in a very rural area one actually lit up our back garden, another was just a bright round light couldn't see anything else because it was night time it was again at the rear garden. In my madness I waved the light went on and off twice in response...I shot inside!!!!!
Interested in reading this author's extraterrestrial species groupings. Missed mammalian and aquatic type species. Covers important species groups though in terms of location origins, general belief types, agendas relating to Earthlings, alliances, mental capabilities, and travel and dimensional capabilities. This book is great for readers interested in exploring extraterrestrial craft propulsion and information about inter-dimensional travel. Artwork throughout book much appreciated! Making compendium of belief types and alliances to add to personal research. Even through an author's point of view, the book contains useful information to readers.
I only read one half of this book and simply couldn’t stand the repetitive nature of each entry and the fanciful descriptions of alleged species throughout the universe. I feel more like I’m reading a comic book with comic book drawings of these creatures than actual well research science. To suggest that all of these species are bilateral in symmetry just like humans is ridiculous. I absolutely do not question that there are many advanced species out there, but I don’t believe that any of what is written in this book is based on fact at all.
Book expects you to not only buy into the idea that aliens exist but also seems to expect you to buy into a slew of additional hyperspecific conspiracy theories.
Also, I don't think the author knows how cameras and photos work because the "alien" at the very end was extremely obviously just a human person who was photographed extremely poorly by an inexperienced photographer with a horrible camera.
Whether you rate this book fiction or non-fiction t is an interesting read. Could be a good reference book or ideas generator for anyone looking to write a sci-fi novel. It makes sense to think that if aliens are visiting this planet that there would be different species, just like we have different types of races here on earth. I am not sure where the author got his information from but I still found the book thought provoking. An interesting read for anyone into sci-fi and/or UFOs.
I've grown tired of all those fear based book circling this topic and was very much pleased to discover that this is not one of them. The tone is clear and concise there is no destructive fear-mongering going on. I hope to use this as a referrence guide for my QHHT and Qunatum Soul Guidance work a lot.
I'm all for a speculative and opinion based book, but this was literally just the thoughts from the author's imagination. There was literally no due diligence (at all) on what he was proposing. I had hoped that the species he was presenting as "real" could be at least (somewhat) substantiated by eyewitness accounts (reliable or not), but apparently this was too much for the author to trouble themselves with. No demonstrable investigation was presented.
I hate to write a negative review on this particular topic, as I truly believe that information regarding UAP/NHI is crucially important to be in the public domain; but as an academic scholar of this field, it's one for the casual reader; one who wants to believe rather than one who wishes to find solid evidence of any true NHI.
This book, a 25mg edible, and a chair during a nice sunset.
If you can get past the dry, repetitive structure of the entries, the assumption you have prior nutfuck knowledge of aliens, and ignore the grim fact people actually believe the things written in this, you'll have a fantasic time riffing on it with some friends.
This is a great sourcebook if you need some inspiration for a whacky conversation or your own fictional setting. My favorite part of this book was towards the end. According to the author, he had an "encounter" with an "interdimensional" that was a blurry black and white photo rather than anything life changing. Luckily, things didn't get anti-semitic like they can with these topics, so that was nice.
I really like to read about conspiracies, aliens, ancient civilizations. It´s funny, refreshing and, sometimes, you learn something crazy or incredible, without having to "believe" in it. I picked this book to hear because I thought it could be fun as "fiction" or "semi-believable", just to pass some time. Well, I think it is bad, a fiction, as "alien conspiracy". Maybe the author just gathered all the junk from the internet and fringe publications and putted here. There are good topics (about Cassiopeians or Annunnaki, for example) treated equally as the total batshit ones, like the "Deros of Mount Shasta". Stay away of it, bad catalog, shallow information.
Like obvi it’s cuckoo but I wish there was necessary context and background for each species’ entry. I wanna read some wildass stories from where the concepts for these aliens come from, I don’t necessarily care about the “lore” that pertains to each species.
This is a super odd collection of weird aliens that reads like nothing so much as a roleplaying game creature compendium. It's clear the author just started making stuff up and didn't stop until he had a book. Three stars because that's either a 1-star waste of time or 5-star awesome.
Most of the dimensional numbers was off and I do not agree with it. Monthman is not a alien or anything like that Monthman is genetical experiment (Grey Aliens) what took place in Dulce its Bat and Human Mix.
I heard the author on one of my favorite podcasts Starseed Academy and decided to purchase the book for reference. Interesting reference book that I will ne keeping as part of my library!
Very repetitive for an audiobook. I suppose it's supposed to be a "reference" manual, but everything is written as if all of the information has been proven to be factual.
To be honest this was a hard one to rate. It had a lot of repetitive information that felt like copy and paste. In saying that what information was provided was interesting.
I was expecting this to be weird and implausible, I was disappointed to find it incredibly boring as well. Everything is super repetitive and not much of interest is presented about anything.