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The Alien Jigsaw
Richard Bonenfant
Shares His Thoughts
© 2012
"What I take most comfort in is your quest to
learn the truth; about us, them, our Government, and the purpose of
it all. That quest is not bias driven, but rather a well reasoned,
carefully measured, open minded approach. I wish more of us could
emulate it."
Read The Review
I Forgot What I Wasn't
Supposed To Remember: An Expanded View Of The Alien Abduction
Phenomenon
Reviewed
by John S. Carpenter, M.S.W, L.C.S.W. for the Journal of
Abduction-Encounter Research
© 2007, 2008
"Having met Kay personally, I was
impressed by how normal she seemed
- bright, articulate, grounded, sensible, fun-loving, caring,
open-minded. Like so many abductees I have known or worked
with, she is a solid person with a good mind who finds herself
unwillingly entangled in this bizarre and confusing phenomenon."
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Thoughts on
Kay Wilson's
Book: I Forgot What I Wasn’t Supposed To Remember
Reviewed
By Vince White © 2008
"How
does one really describe two dozen "impossible things before
breakfast?" But, Kay has done it. It is a Scholar’s delight
to go through intricate bizarre detail after detail – as she
chronicles with the humor and strength, and the wit and
stamina that has allowed her to effectively act as a working
cosmic war reporter..."
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Review
The Alien Jigsaw and The Alien Jigsaw Researcher's
Supplement,
Reviewed by Nina Pendred for Alien Encounters magazine (UK).
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The Alien Jigsaw
Reviewed by Sean Casteel for UFO magazine, Volume 11, Number
1.
"...we...owe a great deal of gratitude to people like Kay Wilson who
possess the intrinsic honesty required to share with the world both
their heartbreak and their ecstasy as they piece together The Alien Jigsaw."
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The
Alien Jigsaw
Reviewed by Forest Crawford for the MUFON UFO JOURNAL, Number 314,
The UFO Press.
"I think The Alien Jigsaw
is one of the best books written by an experiencer about
alien experiences. This book should be considered a must
have for the researcher because it contains details about a
wide variety of aliens and their business, many of which
have never been published.
"
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In Her Own Words: An Abductee's Story
Reviewed by Patrick Huyghe for OMNI Magazine.
"Wilson's candid tale may have already opened the floodgates. Some
researchers new to the field have begun to balk at the prepackaged
version of the abduction phenomenon we have been spoon-fed by the
experts, and other abductees are beginning to step forward with stories
of their own."
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The Alien Jigsaw
Reviewed by Bill Murphy for The Michigan MUFON Newsletter.
"This is not a book focused on the philosophical implications of alien
abductions, as John Mack's work. Nor is The Alien Jigsaw simply
a more straightforward account of one person's or one family's experiences,
as in an Intruders. The Alien Jigsaw is a data set
with some perspectives by one who was literally there, and
who does not force her impressions upon the reader."
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The Alien Jigsaw and The Alien Jigsaw Researcher's
Supplement
Reviewed by Robert Girard for Arcturus Books, Inc.
"Alien Jigsaw may
never be surpassed for its ability to communicate almost
perfectly the exact emotional reaction of a human trapped in
an alien setting. I can't recommend a book on the subject of
UFOs more highly than this one."
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The Alien Jigsaw
Reviewed by Richard Cutting for Strategic Communications.
"One is reminded of Jorges Luis Borges' The Aleph, a story about that
infinitely recessive point in space and time that contains
all things past, present and future. The density of Wilson's
experiences are akin to something like simultaneously
experiencing a showing of Invaders From Mars (1953), a Nobel
Laureate lecture on anthropological genetics and being two hours
into a mantra-induced prayer."
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The Alien Jigsaw
Reviewed by John Kirby for UFO Encounters, Volume 2, Number
2."Although the book lacks the drama of "hard-to-put-down"
books such as Communion, its lower-key style is
filled with details which, to the knowledge of this
reviewer, have never before appeared in print. For this
reason alone, I highly recommend the book for those who have
read the more popular books on the subject and want to know
more, and for those researchers who need to increase their
depth of knowledge on the subject."
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Project Open Mind
(MILABS): Are
Some Alien Abductions Government Mind Control Experiments?
Reviewed by Tony Craddock of UFO
Mind
Read The Review
Other reviews of The Alien Jigsaw can be found in
back issues of:
UNICUS: The Magazine for Earthbound
Extraterrestrials (1995)
Zetetic Scholar (1994)
Contact Forum (1994)
Books Reviewed by
Kay Wilson
Love In An Alien Purgatory:
The Life And Fantastic Art of David Huggins,
By Farah
Yurdozu
Read The Review
Charles A. Huffer's Critique of
Captured:
The Betty and Barney Hill UFO
Read The Review
Experience
Majic Eyes Only:
Earth's Encounters With Extraterrestrial Technology,
by Ryan S. Wood
Read The Review
Abduction In My Life, by Bruce Maccabee,
Ph.D.
Read The Review
Different
Child, by Sandy Nichols
Read The Review
Forbidden Archeology: The Hidden History of
the Human Race, by Michael Cremo and Richard Thompson
Read The Review
Extraterrestrial Visitations: True Accounts of Contact by
Preston Dennett
Read The Review
MILABS: Military Mind Control and
Alien Abduction, by Marion and Helmut_Lammer, Ph.D.
Read The Review
Updated 2011: The Contact Has Begun,
by Phillip Krapf
2011 Update for Readers: Note
the section on the Verdant's "timeline for Humanity" and how
their plans never came to fruition as the author was told they
would.
Read The Review
The ET-Human Link: We Are The Message, by Dana Redfield
Read The Review
UFOs, Prophecy and The End of Time, by Sean Casteel
Read The Review
Unlocking Alien Closets: Abductions, Mind Control and
Spirituality, by Leah Haley
Read The Review
Project Open Mind
(MILABS): Are
Some Alien Abductions Government Mind Control Experiments?, Reviewed by Tony Craddock of UFOmind.com
Read The Review
Other reviews of The Alien Jigsaw can be found in
back issues of:
UNICUS: The Magazine for Earthbound
Extraterrestrials (1995)
Zetetic Scholar (1994)
Contact Forum (1994)
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