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Where do I start with the Hunt for Zero point - while this is a factual book (the British Library classify this as Dewey Decimial Scheme 623.40973 Military and nautical engineering) the author's journey at times appears to be fictional, such is the boundaries of the subject matter).
The starting point is captivating - before the atom bomb, scientists openly discussed that splitting the atom was possible - the theories were openly published in the scientific literature at the time - when governments started serious work in this area, making progress - suddenly everything went dark - no more public disucssion nor publication in the scientific literature; eventually (and sadly in many respects) the the bomb was announced to the world.
Imagine aerospace engineers openly talking about anti-gravity in he 50's and 60's; stating that the Wright brothers got it all wrong - why push a vehicle through the air, when you can manipulate gravity? The concepts of anti-gravity and flight being openly talked about, most aerospace companies started to look into this, openly, several engineers published on how gravity could be manipulated, and then, like the work to split the atom, when progress may have been made, it all goes dark.
I don't want to give too much away, the Hunt for Zero point, not least given the credientials of the author opens the possibility that anti-gravity is perhaps more than a dream; that the trillion dollar world of black budget military research, has made inroads and what for many is a facet of science fiction, may now have some basis, in the world.
The 4 hardened aircraft shelters, on the book cover, to me, at that angle, give a passing nod to the pyramids.
If you want to read something different, something that challanges your view of the world, then I recommend this, most highly.
As ever, I appreciate that YMMV.
All the best,
Chris