Interview with Mridu Khullar

The author of “Knock Their Socks Off! A Freelance Writer’s Guide to Query Letters That Sell” talks about her book, why the query is so critical, why she owns up to her imperfections, her web site, Writer’s Crossing, on the pitfalls of being a professional writer in India, on cultural differences when querying across countries, on the biggest mistake writers make when querying, her tattoo, and lots more.

A review of Carl Sagan and Immanuel Velikovsky by Charles Ginenthal

I was a young man when I read Velikovsky’s books, but I always though, in my mature years, that it was sad for Velikovsky to be denied recognition for his contribution to human understanding by so many prominent scientists, even after he was dead. And I always wondered how justified were his critics in their condemnation of him. This book by Charles Ginenthal: Carl Sagan and Immanuel Velikovsky clarifies what happened between Velikovsky and his critics, principally Carl Sagan.

A review of Pharaohs and Kings by David M. Rohl

Forty-three years later, David Rohl published Pharaohs and Kings.  Rohl, an eminent Egyptologist, spent twenty years examining the basis for the four pillars (or known dates) in Egyptian history.  Benefitted by recent archaeological research, particularly by a catch of mummified Apis bulls (considered the sacred dwelling place of gods by the ancient Egyptians and carefully mummified when they died) Rohl and others constructed an unbroken line of dates intermeshing when the bulls were alive with the pharaohs who reigned when the bulls lived.