“I have just come out from the giddy ride through things of the mind and mathematics that is The God Problem. Bloom takes us on a magic carpet ride of ideas about: well, about everything. And it turns out that everything we knew about everything is probably wrong. ...an intellectual cave of wonders. Don't start this book late at night, for it will banish sleep," writes Robin Fox, University Professor of Social Theory, Rutgers University, author of "The Tribal Imagination: Civilization and the Savage Mind," and former director of research for the H. F. Guggenheim Foundation.

Pledge $220 and get a beyond-complete electronic library of all of Howard Bloom’s books, including both of his highly praised but unpublished books. And brace yourself for controversy. This package includes a pdf of the entire author’s original manuscript of The God Problem (“Profound and extraordinary.” Yuri Ozhigov, Chair of Quantum Informatics, Moscow State University), plus a personally signed, paper, published copy of The God Problem, plus a Word file of the original author’s manuscript of The Lucifer Principle: A Scientific Expedition into the Forces of History ("Bloom's work marshals a quantity of evidence reminiscent of Darwin's 1859 Origin of Species." Wired), plus the Word file of the original author’s manuscript of Global Brain: The Evolution of Mass Mind from the Big Bang to the 21st Century ("A soaring song of songs about the amorous origins of the world, and its almost medieval urge to copulate." Kevin Kelly), plus the Word file of the original author’s manuscript of The Genius of the Beast: a Radical Re-Vision of Capitalism ("Impressive and stimulating. A tremendously enjoyable book." James Fallows, National Correspondent for The Atlantic, Chairman of the Board of the New America Foundation), plus the author’s original electronic manuscript of his unpublished book How I Accidentally Started The Sixties (“a monumental, epic, glorious literary achievement.” Timothy Leary) and, topping it all off, the highly controversial The Mohammed Code: Why a Desert Prophet Wants You Dead.



Writes PJ Media's David Swindle, “The Mohammed Code is keeping me up at night. It's a terrifying book-- like a horror novel. It's the best book I've read on Islam.” Adds Amir Siddiqui, trainer to the stars of Pakistan's national cricket team and founder of the Symmetry gym in Dubai,

“A Bloom book dealing with the evil tyrant Mohammad is a BRILLIANT idea Bloom’s writings have changed my life in ways I never thought I could change. He’s brave in the face of potential fatwas. Testicular fortitude and brains seem to go together in his case. Rare; but then again he is very special in more ways than one.” Which leads us to the subject of what you can get if you

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