![]() That I have come to know Brad, have co-written a book with him ( The Zombie Book), and have become friends with him, are all major bonuses. ![]() What I can be sure of, however, is that Brad’s book opened my mind to a wide-range of enigmas – and ultimately played a significant role in spurring me on to do my own investigations and, eventually, writings, too. ![]() I wish I could say those nights were dark and stormy, but I can’t be sure. It may sound like a classic cliché, but I really did stay up late in my bedroom reading its packed pages. I recall eagerly digesting the pages of Mysteries of Time and Space, and marveling at the enigmas – ancient and modern – that filled the pages of the book. Its bright purple cover, which was dominated by a painting of a classic flying saucer, jumped out at me. The copy that came into my eager hands was published in the UK – where I’m originally from – by Sphere Books, Ltd. Brad’s book was among the first titles on the domain of the unknown on which I spent my pocket-money, as well as my earnings from delivering newspapers around town. I was exposed to the worlds of the paranormal and the supernatural around five or six years earlier, when my parents took me to Loch Ness, Scotland home of the legendary, long-necked Nessie (or Nessies, depending on your perspective). It was back in 1977 – when I was just twelve years old – that I purchased a copy of Brad Steiger’s classic book, Mysteries of Time and Space.
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