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The Mothman's Photographer II: Meetings With Remarkable Witnesses Touched by Paranormal Phenomena, UFOs, and the Prophecies of West Virginia's Infamous Mothman

 
 
The Mothman's Photographer II: Meetings With Remarkable Witnesses Touched by Paranormal Phenomena, UFOs, and the Prophecies of West Virginia's Infamous Mothman
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The Mothman's Photographer II: Meetings With Remarkable Witnesses Touched by Paranormal Phenomena, UFOs, and the Prophecies of West Virginia's Infamous Mothman

Spurred in 2001 by the realization that the 9/11 attacks were accurately predicted - in 1967 - by a friend who was seeing Mothman, Seattle artist Andrew Colvin began filming a video series, "The Mothman's Photographer," documenting his experiences growing up near Pt. Pleasant, WV.

"The Mothman's Photographer II" book is based on the first half of that series, where Colvin returns to West Virginia to interview friends and family who saw Mothman. While there, Colvin is granted the last in-depth interview with the late John Keel, author of "The Mothman Prophecies." Keel actually contributes several chapters to "The Mothman's Photographer II," in the form of never-before-published transcripts of various Mothman lectures.

Colvin also travels to several Mothman, UFO, and Bigfoot sighting spots in the Ohio Valley, including his old neighborhood in Mound, WV, where the shadows of Charles Manson and Sara Jane Moore are still cast. At a "vortex" spot where many creatures were seen, Colvin and his team encounter an energy field whose behavior leads Colvin to a breakthrough. Using an array of facts, figures, and synchronicities, Colvin shocks listeners to one of America's top conspiracy shows, "The Grassy Knoll," by explaining who Mothman may really be, and what his prophecies may really mean.

"Powerful... Perhaps more unsettling than 'The Mothman Prophecies'..." -Adam Gorightly, Untamed Dimensions

"Very cool..." -Jeff Wamsley, curator, The Mothman Museum

"We can now drop the word 'conspiracy." Colvin is one of our country's greatest thinkers, period..." -Ben Camp, Taos Public Radio

"Obsessed... Unusual... Fascinating..." -John Keel, author, The Mothman Prophecies

“Better than the Hollywood version of Mothman...” -Bonnie Brault, Ph.D.

"Inspired..." -Allen Greenfield, Secret Cipher of the Ufonauts

"Pertinent... Iconoclastic... Semi-legendary... An essential procurement for the paranormal enthusiast." -Jeff Harvey, Singularity Rare & Fine Books

"The most exciting, compelling work to come along in quite some time... Filled with a flood of new ideas, theories, and observations..." -Mothman.com

"Engaging and honest... Loosens mental constructs in ways that are most beneficial..." -Kevin Aagaard

"Exciting, thought-provoking, 'lateral' thinking." -Mark Randall

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Product Details:
Author: Andrew Colvin
Paperback: 456 pages
Publisher: BookSurge Publishing
Publication Date: August 10, 2007
Language: English
ISBN: 1419652664
Package Length: 8.9 inches
Package Width: 6.0 inches
Package Height: 1.2 inches
Package Weight: 1.65 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 5 reviews
 
 

Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.5 ( 5 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

14 of 14 found the following review helpful:

5A Great New Study of the Mothman Controversy  Jul 16, 2008
By Nick Redfern "Author, journalist, lecturer"
Last night, I finished reading Andy Colvin's book, The Mothman's Photographer II. This is one of those books that is essential reading for those of you fascinated with Mothman.

Somewhat appropriately, and like the Mothman mystery itself, the book is full of all sorts of twists and turns, dark and disturbing scenarios, contains as many questions as it does answers, and definitely defies convention.

The book basically tells the very personal story of Colvin's interest in, and obsession with, the Mothman; something that began in his childhood in the sixties when he and his friends constructed a "shrine" to the Mothman - and after which strange and bizarre things began happening to Colvin, to his family, and to those around him.

In many ways, Colvin's book is more mind-bending than John Keel's The Mothman Prophecies. But this is a good thing: rather than simply go over old ground, and recount the original story, Colvin describes for us how the Mothman personally affected, manipulated, and possibly guided, his own life experiences, right through to the present day.

And it's written in an appropriately unconventional style too: via interviews, transcripts, personal comments and thoughts, and more.

For those who view Mothman as purely a crypto-zoological puzzle, you'll find yourselves at odds with Colvin, who places the creature in a very different category.

Essentially, Colvin views the Mothman as being akin to the Garuda - the majestic bird-like entity of Buddhist and Hindu mythology. Colvin's view is that the presence of the Mothman at the Point Pleasant, West Virginia bridge-collapse of 1967 (as described in Keel's book) was not in any way sinister.

Rather, Colvin sees the Mothman/Garuda as being basically a benign entity, and one that surfaces from its strange realm of existence at times of peril and strife, and when things are distinctly ill with the world. Part-helper, part-guide, it's inextricably linked with us - but generally for the better, Colvin believes.

But it's also a creature whose presence should not be taken lightly - nor should the fact that the creature's presence at Point Pleasant may have been tied in with a whole host of other activity, including classified government projects in the fields of mind-manipulations and psychotronics, synchronicities, the Men in Black, dark and tragic prophecies, the world of big-business, the military-industrial complex, and much more.

The Mothman's Photographer II is a fantastically strange trip into a world without rules, where just about anything goes, and where convention is thrown out of the window. But it works - and it works very well.

If you read the book, you are likely going to come away with a new view (or, at the very least, a modified view) of Mothman, thanks to a man who had the vision and guts to follow his instinct and present his data, ideas, theories and thoughts to those willing to listen.

And, given the fact that it seems the nature of Colvin's life was almost pre-destined from the day he first immersed himself in the world of the Mothman, perhaps he was meant to write the book. And perhaps we're all meant to read it. If so, Colvin has done us a great service in providing a book that is unique, unusual, riveting reading, and beyond thought-provoking.

Read and prepare to have your mind blown, bent, reorganized and, if you get the message, elevated, too.

10 of 10 found the following review helpful:

5Andy Colvin Rocks Your Mothy Socks!  Sep 25, 2008
By Lesley Gunter
This book is not only full of Mothy goodness, but much more.

Andy Colvin shows there is much more going on with Mothman than just the sightings of the creature. There are endless synchronicities and connections with other paranormal subjects, as well as fringe science such as mind control.

Honestly I think you could take the research in this book and make a great conspiracy/paranormal thriller film from it.

You get so much with this book -- interviews with Andy and dozens of other interesting people that have something to add to the Mothman tale. There are witnesses and esoteric legends like John Keel adding their two cents.

I would think this is required reading not only for those interested in Mothman, but anyone interested in the paranormal, ufos and/or conspiracy.

Two thumbs up for Andy!

9 of 11 found the following review helpful:

5Mothman's Boswell  Jul 15, 2008
By A. W. Senior "The Carpal Tunnel Kid"
Andrew Colvin has put together an amazing, detailed, and compendious book on sightings of the Mothman, or Garuda, whose visage Colvin has apparently captured on film--but which also touches on the Rockefellers, the Manson Family, The Philadelphia Experiment, Union Carbide, and strange 1967 premonitions of the destruction of the World Trade Center.

With transcripts of his interviews by the excellent Keith Hansen ("Vyzygoth") framing the work, Colvin weaves a fascinating tapestry of synchronicity, anomaly, and unexplained occurrence. There are transcripts also of talks by Grey Barker and John Keel, and of Colvin's own television program, The Mothman's Photograper, with annotations and asides by Colvin throughout. There is much, much more, though.

The Garuda has been legendary throughout human history as a harbinger and a protector--an inspirer of prophetic visions. That this legend would manifest itself to Americans in the 21st century is, in Colvin's view, some cause for alarm--and comfort. Alarm, because its appearance usually foretokens disaster; comfort, because those visited are forewarned and forearmed. Colvin's friends and family in and around Mound, West Virginia speak eloquently of their visitations.

My recommendation is that you unplug the phone, toss aside the iPod, shoot the television and spend a weekend delving into this most fascinating book.

2The Mothman Babble  Feb 01, 2012
By Steve from North
I was looking for a sober account of eyewitness accounts of Mothman sightings. This book is clearly not that. It is a 'rambling' account of every conspiracy theory under the sun (ufo's, astral projection, esp, ghosts, aliens, and yes even the Kennedy Assassination.) which the author tries to tie in somehow with the Mothman. The book repeats itself quite often in subsequent chapters and is overwhelmingly 'out there'. I believe in the eyewitness accounts of the Mothman that I have read and recently bought the DVD documentary, 'Eyes of the Mothman' that was very well done. This book is not worth buying in my estimation. Buy the DVD that I mention instead and look at the Bonus Feature in-person interviews with the eyewitnesses.

5Fans of Keel's Book will Love This One,Too.  Apr 11, 2011
By Brizdaz
Andy Colvin has done an excellent job with this book.Although the book is largely transcripts of interviews with various people from his "Mothman Photographer" DVD,it's also full of reflective questioning of himself and others,as they try to make sense of the Mothman phenomena,as well as paragraphs added later in hindsight,to highlight something that was said in an earlier interview or radio broadcast.This book is just as important as Keel's book,when it comes to examining the "Mothman" and events surrounding this strange creature.
It makes a good read as a stand alone book,but I would suggest getting at least "Mothman Photographer 1" for all those great eerie photos,which really helps to set the scene here in the second book.
You really need to read this book with an open mind,but if you enjoyed Keel's book then it's already open enough.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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