Title: The Premonition Man: UFOs, Aliens, and Spirits in the Afterlife help a Psychic to Dream the Future
Authors: Grant Solomon, Jane Solomon.
Publisher: Campions Book (Kindle Edition)
ISBN: 9781906815240
Book Review by Athanasios Komianos
I would really love to thank the authors of this striking book, Grant and Jane Solomon, for gathering and putting together all this mass of material, filtering through it and bringing to us the distilled essence of the experiences of this extraordinary man called Chris Robinson. Most of the people who do have exceptional experiences – way out of the ordinary – have been brushed by death (i.e. Psychic Vietnam, BBC documentary). Mr. Robinson did not come near death, but actually his heart came to a full and complete stop at the age of thirty-five. During this brief period before his resuscitation, a sort of a deal was made that if he were to come back, he would have to share messages that concerned fellow humans and humanity in general. So, from that moment on Mr. Robinson had persistent dreams – nightmares one would say – that brought him images from the future.
Thanks to this book we can understand how uncanny and uncomfortable it was to deal with this flooding of painful, appalling and distraught images that bombarded his nightlife. No person would be able to withstand what happened to this man for such an extended period of time. Seeing plane crashes, IRA bombings, rapes of children and murders was part of his everyday life. After some police officers started to cooperate with him there was some progress, more in solving unsolved crime cases rather than in deterring terrorist attacks, even though in at least one case there was prevention. The degree of accuracy was rather impressive. The readers will be shocked if they see how difficult it was to decipher through the riddle of Robinson’s dream notes. One may wonder why it is so difficult for entities from the other side to transmit messages to our side. It seems as if there is big trouble in converting from the spiritual ‘language’ to plain English. Is there noise during the ‘file transfer’? Is there ‘software’ incompatibility?
The point is that Robinson managed to develop a basic key code of his dreams which helped him to improve his deciphering technique. In time he became all the more accurate in his predictions. He did not claim the credit for himself. On the contrary, he made sure that he always referred to his discarnate spirit helpers, the Guides and ET’s, that leaked the events of the future.
I had heard of a man that had dreamed about the 9/11 disaster before it happened but I had not registered that it was Chris Robinson. Another individual had a vision of the Pentagon explosion (Sally Rhine Feather, The Gift, 2005) but in Chris’s case he had written to the US embassy In London two weeks prior to the event, but no one seemed to bother with his notice. Anyway, this mind-bending book is a must to those students of the paranormal and the extraordinary. Robinson is one of the “white crows” William James sought for.
The authors have done a great job in compiling all this information and I am very grateful to them because they delivered to humanity one of the most important accounts that is a breach to the monolithic, compact and immovable stance of mainstream scientism. Unfortunately, in this book you will also notice how the socalled sceptics (the well-known Randy, Wiseman, Blackmore, and French) moved the goal posts in order to discredit Robinson and render him as a fraud. But fortunately enough, there were other real scientists who painstakingly took the trouble to examine his dream for years as Dr Keith Hearne did and as Dr Garry Schwartz in the famous “Arizona experiment”.
For me this book is a milestone in the building of the new emerging paradigm, in which there is plenty of room for all these exceptional phenomena, the paranormal, the afterlife encounters, the intervention of higher intelligence and an interaction with the transcendental dimensions of a vast cosmos of infinite possibilities.