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S**H
Its A Page-Turner That Made Me Think
Whether you believe it or not, the text that editor/author DEMMON presents is fascinating and original. I just finished reading it and I wanted to get in here and write a review. First and foremost, I must say that the book is completely entertaining. My brain was engaged. What happens in The Lost Book of King Og is so complex and violent that I don't know if it could be reproduced in a different medium, like say a comic book, or a movie.Before purchasing the book, I had to be honest with myself and acknowledge that these are the writings of a giant from antiquity. Do I believe in giants? How much do I believe in the Bible's telling of the giants? That is the rack that all readers have to find to hang their hat upon. I went in as a skeptic and came out the other side with a wealth of deep concepts and long-buried original concepts. I am still unsure if giants actually existed in Biblical times, but oh boy, this book really tipped the scales towards such a reality.The Lost Book of King Og presents a violent, Baal worshiping, female-less society of Rephaim giants directly before and after the Biblical flood in Genesis. The notion that the Vatican would suppress such a text makes complete sense as one reads through the text. The blasphemy is extreme, spiritually perverse, ancient and complete. Most puzzling is that there is no real sexual perversion in the translation because the giants have been rendered useless in that department due to their lack of women. The concept of giants having sex with human women isn't even addressed. Probably because it was a physical impossibility.I think what sold me on this book was this quote on the back by Father Martin:"The Book of King Og is the densest Christian blasphemy that I have ever read."The quote is a hard-sell, but it is accurate if you are familiar with your scripture. An example of this is that King Og puts on the whole armor of Baal before physical warfare on the battlefield. In some ways is the armor is similar to the armor of God spoken of in Ephesians 6. Leaving the reader with the question of the spiritual armor's existence in the first place. Does the concept of King Og's armor pre-date Paul's letter to Ephesus? I'll tell you that I am highly persuaded to think so.By the way, verse numbers throughout the text make it easy to cross-reference and make notes (I made plenty).I found that the most interesting chapters are those that can't be found online ( www.thelostbookofkingog.com ). I read through what was available online before I purchased the book, because I wanted to make sure the 20 bucks that I spent wasn't being wasted. What is missing coupled with what is available online is definitely is worth the price. Those exclusively for the book are chapters where the giants are named and their spiritual and physical deformities and gifts (sort of like the "begats" in the Bible) are expounded upon before they go the "Hundred Thousand Giant War," which historically happened before the great flood.Father Martin, the actual translator of the book is afforded 2 key quotes (including the one above that is on the book jacket) and an afterward in the book that is really insightful. Father Martin reads like he is the throes of a personal spiritual crisis in his "Satan's Work Is Done" essay at the end of the book.The Lost Book of King Og is short, but incredibly dense. There is so much going on here that it is going to take me another reading. I took a lot of notes. The concepts of "The Unspeakable Mistake," "smaller selves," "The dark and bright ones," "The Driver and the Chaser," "The Moonchild", the sacrificing of infants to Baal, and the origin of the concept of circumcision are all on display. The world presented is one that I never, ever considered.As a student of the Bible, I feel driven to it to determine which came first, The Book of Og or The Bible. What seems to be apparent is that the writers of the Bible had access to this forbidden text.The Lost Book of King Og is definitely a must-read if you are looking for more information on the world that surrounded Noah in Genesis 6, or Moses in Numbers 21.If you don't believe that the text is original, it certainly won't take from this absolutely fascinating presentation.I suppose that in the end, this book is a great read and activates your brain in areas you didn't ever consider. Is that not what reading a book is all about?Now I have to go back and read the Book of Enoch and cross-reference even more!
J**O
May have some information concerning the idolatry in ancient days, though be aware (VERY GRAPHIC).
If this was really written by Idol worshipers then buyer beware that even though it might pertain to a biblical related subject there are some gross things concerning the activities of baal worshipers that most readers unless they were mature, or even if they were may have an issue reading this even if they are trying to understand something on the side concerning that subject because of the graphic nature as what they were supposedly involved in (The Idol worshipers, and OG). The buyer should be aware of this before buying because it is still highly graphic concerning the perverse acts of those who worshiped baal of which is just another name for Azaz'el (Asa'el The messenger of the Abyss).
A**F
Great book
Good book for those seeking
B**N
Strange Little Book
This is an interesting and strange book. Likely only to appeal to those who are already captivated by esoteric and ancient texts. While one can debate the authenticity of this text, it certainly fits a paradigm of historicity that is defensible from other sources that can be more easily proven to be reliable. Whether fantasy, fact, or somewhere in the middle - it is interesting nonetheless and should be to anyone who takes a literalist view of Genesis 6 of the Christian Bible. Be prepared, there is some vulgarity to be found here.While I am grateful for the publishing of this work, the commentary at the beginning and the end by the author is nonsensical and ridiculous. I would have been much happier with the raw text without the errant framing by the author.
M**G
Review Mr. Demmon's "The Lost Book Of King Og"
Review of Mr. Demmon's "The Lost Book Of King Og". If this book is, indeed, the only surviving writing of a member of the race know as "the Rephaim", it is a truly amazing find for modern humanity. We know almost nothing about many of the groups of humans and pseudo-humans from our long, distant past history. It just puzzles me why so many of these so called "heroes(???) and "men of renown(???) were not much more than homicidal maniacs who in today's world would be either behind unchallengable bars, or executed before they could murder many more innocent people. Is this what we get from worshipping demon gods? This book is a great warning for modern humanity. Thanks for this amazing book, Amazon.
H**Y
Either this author plagiarized the new testament, or the new testament plagiarized this author
There are several sections of this book that are almost word-for-word the same as various new testament verses.A Hebrew scholar named Eric Bissell pointed this out, while reading my copy. He pointed out over a dozen specific portions of this book, before he quit reading it and put it down.I submit that either this author plagiarized the new testament, or the new testament plagiarized this author. Given what I have learned about the vatican and catholic history, it is 50/50 on which one is correct. What we need, is for an ancient Hebraic version of this text to be discovered, before I am willing to lean one way or another.Either way, it is an interesting read. If it is authentic, you can almost smell the hatred of Moses by Og.Note that there are some major discrepancies between this book, and the Biblical narratives of Jasher, Jubilees, and the Tanakh. This King Og book differs from all of the other texts on some key topics related to Nimrod.
W**S
Interesting read
Not sure what to believe about it. Definitely worth $20.buy your copy and see what you think
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