Bob Frissell is merely repeating what's all ready been said in
Drunvalo Melchizedek's fascinating Flower of Life books. Why even
bother writing this one unless it is to capitalize on the original? The
diagrams and examples in "Nothing in This Book is True, But it's
Exactly How Things Are," are even taken from Melchizedek's. How
disappointing this was to me. This is like the condensed, extremely
condensed, version of a superior work (confounding as it is!). In any
case, there's lots of talk about secret societies, crop circles, aliens,
ascended masters, the pyramids, Mars, etc., etc., etc. You can find
information on this stuff in many, many other books as well. I find it
intriguing that every book I read about these matters offers a different
explanation. It appears that there are many different versions of "how
things are" out there and I certainly cannot buy what the title of this
book indicates; that the information given here is, in fact, "HOW
THINGS ARE." Read this, certainly, for a bit of mind expansion or read
it for a bit of fun (however, the sacred geometry does go a bit over the
edge, as in The Flower of Life books). But don't take it too
seriously. There are lots of other explanations as to who we are, why
we're here, where we came from, where we are going, and who is walking
among us. Who's right? Who's not right? Who is close to being right?
It's all so complicated, isn't it? Yep.