Poll
Which one of these books did you gain the most "underground knowledge" from?
39 total votes
Poll added by: James
This Poll is About
Authors:
Alan Moore, Graham Hancock, Robert Shea, Umberto Eco, Joseph Heller, Robert Lomas, James Bamford, George Orwell, Richard Condon, Sibel Edmonds, Ira Levin, J.D. Salinger, Paramahansa Yogananda, David Icke, Suzanne Collins, Jonathan Black, Kurt Vonnegut Jr., Dan Brown, Stieg Larsson, Jon Ronson, John Perkins, Aldous Huxley, David Baldacci, J.K. Rowling, Michael Baigent, Michael Talbot, Oliver Stone, Oliver Sacks
Books:
Alan Moore, Graham Hancock, Robert Shea, Umberto Eco, Joseph Heller, Robert Lomas, James Bamford, George Orwell, Richard Condon, Sibel Edmonds, Ira Levin, J.D. Salinger, Paramahansa Yogananda, David Icke, Suzanne Collins, Jonathan Black, Kurt Vonnegut Jr., Dan Brown, Stieg Larsson, Jon Ronson, John Perkins, Aldous Huxley, David Baldacci, J.K. Rowling, Michael Baigent, Michael Talbot, Oliver Stone, Oliver Sacks
Books:
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Java
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Jan 25, 2015 05:38AM
Having only read 9 of these titles, I vote for The Name of the Rose, Umberto Eco.
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It was a toss up between Fingerprints of the Gods and The Biggest Secret, but I went for the latter seeing as the often poo-pooed David Icke got me on the road to conspiracies and underground knowledge in the first place.
everything is not a conspiracy!!! some thing are just fiction! I read several of these...and while there is the idea of conspiracy in some of them...it doesn't make them "underground knowledge"!
Okay I have to admit that I've only read one and a half (lol gotta get that half in there) of these books. So I am not going to vote but I will add these to a special underground knowledge reading list to make sure I make my way through them this year.
I guess I'll have to make a similar comment as Irene - the poll is difficult to implement since there are so many books that other readers have not read (so obviously they cannot vote on them). Yet, like Irene - I will be adding those I haven't read and that look promising to my bookshelves.I'll take that opportunity to mention The Lone Gladio by Sibel Edmonds.




