Featured Books from New Thinking Allowed

An investigation revisits a little known UFO crash in Mid Wales that some consider Europe’s closest parallel to the famous Roswell incident. The account brings together eyewitness testimony, images of recovered debris, documentary work, and new international scientific analysis of the fragments. Four decades after the event, the physical evidence and unanswered questions continue to deepen the mystery surrounding the case.


Whitley Strieber and Jeffrey J. Kripal explore anomalous experiences and argue that many events labeled paranormal may actually be natural phenomena that our current frameworks fail to understand. Drawing on personal encounters, historical accounts, and religious scholarship, they propose that reality is far stranger and more populated with forms of intelligence and experience than conventional science assumes. 


Nancy du Tertre, known as the Skeptical Psychic, examines psychic perception through both personal experience and analytical inquiry. She describes her own midlife awakening to intuitive abilities and argues that such capacities may be a natural potential present in everyone. The discussion seeks to bridge the divide between skeptics and believers by exploring how intuitive or psychic perception might function within the human brain.

Rosemarie Pilkington examines a remarkable 1930s episode of physical mediumship, in which a group of teenage boys reportedly interacted with a spirit named Dr. Bindelof through table levitations, ectoplasmic appearances, and direct voices. She places this case in the broader history of physical mediums, highlighting extraordinary feats often dismissed as fraudulent or impossible. The work challenges conventional scientific understanding, inviting readers to reconsider the boundaries of reality and the potential authenticity of spiritual phenomena.

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