Friday, September 20, 2019

REVIEW: The Memoirs of Billy Shears


This review of "Memoirs" appears on the Creative Culture Journal, and an excerpt has been reprinted below. 

REVIEW: The Memoirs of Billy Shears

This is sold as fiction and while reading it gives one the disheartening sense of cheap historical fiction, it isn’t even that good. It is more like a long pamphlet from the Jehovah’s Witnesses told through Beatles lyrics and stretched to an over-stuffed 666 pages – it must repeat a lot of stuff and add an advertisement for subsequent Uharriet products, along with lyrics somehow related to a songwriting contest – to imply occult wizardry. 

I suspect that Thomas E. Uharriet did something Beatles fanatics have done for decades, which is to connect the lyrics of Beatles songs into a narrative, a story. Uharriet seems to grab connectors the way Kevin Spacey’s character Verbal Kint did in “The Usual Suspects”, stringing them together to make a ramshackle explanation. Along the way he divulges an Illuminati-created Beatles intelligence operation through his lyrical account, which is purported to be in the words of William Shepherd, who replaced McCartney in 1966. The book seems to have only one purpose, which is to rat out the entire Illuminati-created Beatles intelligence operation, which is either Luciferian or Satanic. Uharriet doesn’t know the difference and uses the words interchangeably.

The review continues HERE

Citation: 

RAR. "REVIEW: The Memoirs of Billy Shears." Creative Culture Journal. N.p., N.d. Web. 20 Sept. 2019. .

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