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Lo! ebook

by Charles Fort


The terms Fortean and Forteana are sometimes used to characterize various such phenomena

The terms Fortean and Forteana are sometimes used to characterize various such phenomena. Fort's books sold well and are still in print. His work continues to inspire admirers, who refer to themselves as "Forteans", and has influenced some aspects of science fiction.

Lo! Welcome to the worlds of Charles Fort, chronicler of the odd, the weird, the strange, the unexpected, and the inexplicable

Lo! Welcome to the worlds of Charles Fort, chronicler of the odd, the weird, the strange, the unexpected, and the inexplicable. In words at times as beautiful as anything ever written in English, Fort reveals the marvels of an age, questions the nature of what we think we know for certain, and provides the reader with leads on how not to be fooled by shaggy dog stories. murderous wild animals, mysterious disappearances, manifestations of psychotic mania, speaking in tongues-and, of course, the cow that gave birth to two lambs.

Charles Fort was a collector of strange tales which he gleamed from dusty newspapers and out of print scientific . Fort - Back in Print Good news: publisher Tim Beckley has just released a 4-book set of Charles Fort's classic titles: Wild Talents; Book of the Damned; New Lands; and Lo!

Charles Fort was a collector of strange tales which he gleamed from dusty newspapers and out of print scientific journals. Fort - Back in Print Good news: publisher Tim Beckley has just released a 4-book set of Charles Fort's classic titles: Wild Talents; Book of the Damned; New Lands; and Lo! Here's what Tim has to say about the books: "I first purchased a copy of one of Charles Fort's books when I was about 13 years old.

Lo! was Charles Forts third book. In it Fort examines a multitude of scientific anomalies

Lo! was Charles Forts third book. In it Fort examines a multitude of scientific anomalies. He would later expand this theory to include purported mental and psychic phenomena in his fourth and final book, Wild Talents.

Book digitized by Google from the library of the University of California and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user tpb.

Book digitized by Google from the library of the University of California and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user tp. .I ask only once a year: please help the Internet Archive today.

Mostly in this book I shall specialize upon indications that there exists a transportory force that I shall call Teleportation. I shall be accused of having assembled lies, yarns, hoaxes, and superstitions. To some degree I think so, myself.

Works by Charles Fort: The Outcast Manufacturers. The Book of the Damned.

Books by Charles Fort: Wild Talents. 9, 10. Lo! ., 10.

Lo! Was Charles Fort's third book. In it Fort examines a multitude of scientific anomalies. Fort is widely credited to have coined the now-popular term teleportation in this book, and here he ties his previous statements on what he referred to as the Super-Sargasso Sea into his beliefs on teleportation. He would later expand this theory to include purported mental and psychic phenomena in his fourth and final book, Wild Talents.
Qudanilyr
Charles Fort writes with the typical droll humor of English authors. It not read carefully one misses it. He loves to discredit astronomers, other scientists and religion. Also, the book is brimming with unexplained happenings, all documented by quotes from newspapers and other periodicals. With tongue in cheek he insists the earth is still and that the stars, sun and moon rotate around us. There's a lot of repitition of strange events which tends to become
faintly boring. I read this book when I was a young man. I'm 86 now and enjoyed it just as much
Grari
If you are interested in odd occurrences and strange sightings, this is the book for you, and it is, of course, a must-have book for fans of Charles Fort, who, many years after his death, became a comic book hero. I bought this book because I knew it included copy about The Crawfordsville Curiosity, an "atmospheric beast" that attacked Crawfordsville, IN, in 1891. I went to Crawfordsville many years ago to do research on the one-eyed "monster."
Cala
Fort was a very interesting man and and his investigations are even more so. I recommend this to anyone interested in the unusual and peculiar. Rain falling from a clear sky. Reported mermaids, Raining frogs....etc.
Mananara
Amazing, and love his biting humor
Thoginn
I am almost to the end of this book,and it is very educational reading material..
Zololmaran
As presented with timely delivery.
Agalas
fascinating.
Way up on that old misty mountain
Where the bear and the catamount range,
A pale ghostly light
Can be seen every night
That no scientist or hunter can explain.
-- "The Brown Mountain Light"

_Lo!_ (1931) is the third of Charles Fort's four stranger-than-science books and the last to be published during his lifetime. His final book, _Wild Talents_ (1932), was published a few months after his death. The title for the book was suggested by Fort's friend Tiffany Thayer. It was meant to be a satirical reference to astronomers who were constantly predicting that a heavenly body would appear in the sky when nothing would in fact be there. It was a joke that backfired. A bit later, Pluto was discovered where Percival Lowell calculated that it would be.

Charles Fort (1874--1932) was a quiet, walrus-shaped man who delighted in creating strange games and collecting natural history artifacts. He was an Hegalian and a self-professed skeptic. But most of all, he was keenly interested in researching anomalies, strange phenomena, and odd occurances that he believed could not be readily explained by orthodox science. He hoped to accumulate a mass of "data" or "damned information" that would serve as an Hegelian antithesis to a scientific thesis.
Fort waxes satirical about what he called the Scientific Priestcraft, but he is also satirical about himself and his sources of information: "Lies, yarns, hoaxes, mistakes-- what's the specific gravity of a lie, and how am I to segregate?" (chapter one). Elsewhere, Fort warns the reader that his works should be considered more fiction than fact. His tongue is always firmly in his cheek, and his humor is one of his most endearing traits as a writer. He is not trying to make us true believers in a single cause. He is encouraging us to think for ourselves.

But if Fort cannot bring himself to segregate, modern readers must. Some of Fort's hypotheses that he offers in _Lo!_ are clearly preposterous: that the Earth is more flat than spherical and rotates only once a year; that it is surrounded by a crystal ceiling over our heads; that the stars are holes in this ceiling through which light shines; that there is a Sargasso Sea in the crystal sky from which drop rains of fish, frogs, periwinkles, and chunks of meat; that sheep and cattle are frequently slaughtered by werewolves and vampires; and that people, animals, and objects are routinely teleported about. (Fort invented the terms "teleportation" and "telekinesis".)

I am highly skeptical of Fort's accounts of ghosts, poltergeists, bleeding statues, human spontaneous combustion, and feats of extrasensory perception. But they are at least a bit more plausible than items in the first category.

Accounts that seem to me to be either probable or well documented include red rains and snow, meteor showers and thunderstones, wheels of Poseidon in the ocean, the Brown Mountain lights, lights or objects in the sky (_not_ flying saucers), odd sea creatures (_not_ sea serpents), animal mutations, deadly flash floods, and strange footprints and fossils.

Fort discusses a number of classical mysteries: the _Marie Celeste_, the disappearance of Ambrose Bierce, Benjamin Bathurst (who "walked around the horses" and vanished), the Jersey devil, and Kaspar Hauser. Other items of interest include alleged scientific hoaxes, lesser known vanishings at sea, the case of Agatha Christie, cases of amnesia (or purported amnesia), and the Man from Mars. One case not discussed is the Loch Ness monster. While stories of this creature were told for quite some time, it did not receive widespread publicity until 1934, two years after Fort's death. I suspect that Fort would have loved to haved written about Nessie had he known of her. I will leave it to individual readers to decide whether they agree with Fort's interpretations of these events.

Unfortunately, there are a number of Forteans today who take Fort literally and who completely miss his humor. Martin Gardner has written of these latter-day believers:

If a Baker Street Irregular began to think that Sherlock Holmes actually did exist, all the good clean fun would vanish. Similarly, when a Fortean seriously believes that all scientific theories are equally absurd, all the rich humor of the Society gives way to an ignorant sneer. (_Fads and Fallacies_, 1957, 49)

I am not generally a fan of proponents of pseudoscientific movements. But I do have a fondness for Fort, with this _caveat_: When you read _Lo!_, remember that Fort was more of a humorist and a writer of nonsense than he was a profound and solemn philosopher.
Lo! ebook
Author:
Charles Fort
Category:
New Age & Spirituality
Subcat:
EPUB size:
1565 kb
FB2 size:
1671 kb
DJVU size:
1899 kb
Language:
Publisher:
Wilder Publications (March 26, 2009)
Pages:
248 pages
Rating:
4.6
Other formats:
rtf lit lrf lrf
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