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See The Insane Reviews 

See, also known as king Crimson the Bringer of Oblivion, and his queen Ada the Songbird are intertwined
into the future, and the ancient past. There are dark forces warring in galaxies of time and dimensions.
The story is a flow of memories being bought forward from the past. A story of never-ending timeless
love, dominance, insane confusion, and ultimately power.


I love how the characters are all interconnected into dimension of time and how Ada can reach into
See’s mind to gain knowledge and power. See is a great warrior, ruthless when threatened, his love for
Ada guides him as he seeks the truth. My imagination was captivated by this book, it’s an
interdimensional place were nothing ends and there’s always new beginnings. Eugenie Wilson,
Mareeba.
***
A story combining multiple realities within a transdimensional multiverse, touching on a vast list from
the abstract description of string theory, pop culture, power-play and the dynamics between genders;
oh yeah, and don’t forget black holes!


See must solve a challenge, laying down a gauntlet of conflict and turmoil leading to intriguing
outcomes, whilst Ada’s sensitivity may be one reason for empathy or concern or, rather, the lack of
either.


A blurry realm of physics meets fantasy gives this metaphysical escapade with romantic entanglements.

- Scott Blackman

Mareeba.

“See the Insane” opens with a drifting consciousness flickering as photonic standing waves.


The reader is drawn to the protagonist's consciousness, a half breed god known a ‘Halfgerour’ the offspring of ancient Teachers, entities from the tenth dimension known as the Hu.


The reader is taken on a gripping adventure that plays out through a strange twist of flashbacks within human wars, intertwined with a cosmic struggle of higher consciousness. The story seems to cascade before a reader to experience a dream within a memory drowning into an unholy matrimony of insanity, innocence and romance."

—Chisak G. Momin
Chief Judicial Magistrate & Civil Judge. Meghalaya, India

“See the Insane” has set up a unique and cerebrally challenging read. The story of a Hu, a ten dimensional being. We are drawn to the life and episodes of See. With a strong cast of character partnerships being well fleshed out “See the Insane” intertwines through plot twists exploring innocence, romance and warrior discipline. Reading this draft made me feel engaged and ready to open the finished product.

—Dr Ben Ireland MBBS

Known by many names our dimensional traveller swings from moods of love and harmony to distrust and annihilation. The beginning is full of complex fantasy and physics, that then mellows into romance and adventure.

The abrupt changes in story line and characters moods, is not an aspect of the book I enjoyed, but it is congruent with the characters and plot.

Overall, it was a stimulating read.

Berend Akkerman, Mareeba, Australia.

As I perused through "See the Insane," two thoughts kept ringing a bell in my head: Hu and Quantum Reality. The prologue of this amazing sci-fi opens with a mindboggling expose of the 12 Dimensions, with particular reference to See, a multidimensional being from the 10th Dimension -- thus, a Hu-kind. And the first bell rang. My knowledge of "Hu" refers to it as a Sufi (Muslim mystics) word for God. Not the conventional God that has been crystalized into a commercial deity by religion, but God as Energy.

 Reading deeper, I discovered that Sean's book is not your usual "coffee table" type of read. It's rather a hardcore Quantum-Reality stuff cut out pure and undiluted from Sean's fabric of imagination! It's gripping, engaging and -- did I mention? -- mindboggling. Oh, yes!

Imagine a world where reality changes substance in a blink of imagination. That's Quantum Reality. I remember once when Sean said that "the difference between spirituality and Quantum Physics is semantics." In essence, Sean's book opens a new chapter of vista in the ways we perceive Reality -- we are not physical bodies having spiritual experiences: we are spirit beings (souls) having physical experiences. That's what makes us human (Hu-Man) -- or should I say, Hu-kind?

O'rie Igwe,

Author and Filmmaker, Technical Head:

Inside African Network.

Book no.1
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