Acknowledgments
Hakim’s hashish-packaging activity was inspired by Howard Marks’s account of a similar operation, which he describes in his extraordinary autobiography, Mr Nice (Martin Secker & Warburg, Ltd., London, 1996).
A second autobiography, this one by a former CIA officer, tells of his 1965 plane crash in the Congo, and of the infestation of his injuries by bees and other bugs. See The American Agent, by Richard L. Holm (St. Ermin’s Press, London, 2003).
Four books were essential sources for the Tesla material in Ghost Dancer. First and foremost, Margaret Cheney’s Man Out of Time is a mesmerizing read. Many anecdotes about Tesla’s life and exploits were drawn from its entertaining pages. John J. O’Neill’s Prodigal Genius: The Life of Nikola Tesla was another key source, as were David Peat’s In Search of Nikola Tesla and George Trinkhaus’ Tesla: The Lost Inventions. In addition, on-line sources provided invaluable details about Tesla and his inventions. Colonel Tom Bearden’s various sites are intriguing and filled with information, as are sites associated with Rick Andersen. Recommended also are sites of the Tesla Society and the New Tesla Society, as well as “Confessions of a Tesla Nerd,” by Marc J. Seifer, Ph.D. Timothy Ventura’s essay “Tesla’s Death Ray” was helpful in envisioning how such a weapon might work. “Radiant Energy: Unraveling Tesla’s Greatest Secret, Part 1” by Ken Adachi (June 1, 2001) (http:educate-yourself.org) offers insights into Tesla’s explorations of electrical phenomena – and photographs of the inventor and some of his inventions and experiments. The website of the Nikola Tesla Museum (www.tesla-museum.org) provides a wealth of information about the inventor. No physics text could come close to the wonderfully clear explanation of how the voice of an opera singer breaks glass – and other examples of “forced oscillation resonance” – at the website http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/801/can-opera-singers-shatter-glass-with-their-high-notes.
Legends abound about Tesla and the Tunguska incident, yet there is abdundant evidence that a devastating event did occur in Siberia at the same time Tesla was experimenting with the transmitter at Wardenclyffe. The notion that Tesla’s experiment caused the disaster, while not invented by the author, remains speculative. Numerous stories alleging that Admiral Peary stood as Tesla’s would-be witness to a promised arctic light show are clearly apocryphal; records show that Peary was not in the arctic at the time of the Tunguska incident. Windjammer Stevenson, an arctic explorer very famous in his time, lived for a long period above the arctic circle, much as described in the pages of Ghost Dancer. However, although Stevenson was in the arctic at the time of the Tunguska incident, the notion that he was Tesla’s “witness” is an invention of the author’s.
Various Internet sources served to enhance the author’s understanding of the electromagnetic pulse, including the explanation of the e-bomb as a possible terrorist weapon available at www.unitedstatesaction.com/emp-terror.htm. Although both authors have visited maximum-security facilities, for operational and architectural detail about the federal government’s Supermax facilities, the authors thank the indispensable Wikipedia – which also contains an excellent essay on directed-energy weapons.
In September, 2004, the National Geographic magazine published a piece on Native Americans. The magazine included a supplemental map of North America. One side of the map provides detail about the linguistic families of Native Americans and their dispersal through the continent. The reverse side displays current tribal areas and populations in the continental United States. At the base of the main map, a series of four smaller maps, dated from 1775 to 2004, shows in graphic and dramatic fashion the transfers of land from native populations to settlers. Entitled “Long History of Losing Ground,” this series of maps served as the inspiration for Jack Wilson’s similarly titled high school project.
Various online sources, including the Berkeley Law Journal (www.law.berkeley.edu) provide further elucidation of the 1951 Invention Secrecy Act and its ongoing application.
The authors would like to thank Elaine Markson and Gary Johnson at the Elaine Markson Agency for their unflagging support. We are grateful also to Ronald Johnson and Ezra Sidran for answering technical questions. David Grove, a pilot, helped with queries about what would happen to an aircraft hit with an electromagnetic pulse.
Any errors, of course, belong to the authors and may not be attributed to their sources.
And finally, many thanks to everyone at Ballantine who helped bring this book to the shelves of bookstores and libraries.
May 4, 2006
Charlottesville, Virginia