"Robert Anton Wilson - Masks of the Illuminati" - читать интересную книгу автора (Wilson Robert Anton)

Masks of the Illuminati
by Robert Anton Wilson
a.b.e-book v3.0 / Notes at EOF


Back Cover:

"I was astonished and delighted. . . Wilson managed to reverse every mental polarity in
me, as if I had been pulled through infinity." -- Phillip K. Dick

One fateful evening in a suitably dark, beer-soaked Swiss rathskeller, a wild and
obscure Irishman named James Joyce would become the drinking partner of an unknown
physics professor called Albert Einstein. And on that same momentous night, Sir John
Babcock, a terror-stricken young Englishman, would rush through the tavern door
bringing a mystery that only the two most brilliant minds of the century could solve. . .or
perhaps bringing only a figment of his imagination born of the paranoia of our times.
An outrageous, raunchy ride through the twists and turns of mind and space,
Masks of the Illuminati runs amok with all our fondest conspiracy theories to show us the
truth behind the laughter. . . and the laughter in the truth.

"[Wilson is] erudite, witty, and genuinely scary." -- Publishers Weekly

"A dazzling barker hawking tickets to the most thrilling tilt-a-whirls and daring loop-o-
planes on the midway to higher conciousness." -- Tom Robbins

"Wilson is one of the most profound, important, scientific philosophers of this century --
scholarly, witty, hip, and hopeful." -- Timothy Leary

"Wilson's ultimate tale of conspiracy: Read this book to fathom your own paranoia!" --
Clifford Stoll, astronomer, author, The Cuckoo's Egg, graduate, Buffalo Public School
#61

"Robert Anton Wilson is one of the leading thinkers of the modern age -- providing an
answer to the vision gap." -- Barbara Marx Hubbard, World Future Society



A DELL TRADE PAPERBACK
Published by
Dell Publishing
a division of
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
1540 Broadway
New York, New York 10036

This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are
either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any
resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely
coincidental.