[8] Hope studied voice, taking lessons with a teacher from the Paris Conservatoire and in London had a small part in West End production for two years.
[8] In 1957 she co-founded the Atlanteans Society with Tony Neate, a healing and spiritual group at Malvern Hills, England, that aimed to treat issues such as exorcism and mental disorders.
[5] By that time Hope wrote a seasonal column for Prediction magazine, a periodical oriented towards mystical subjects, where she used to sign the pseudonym Athene Williams.
[1] In 1977 Hope had her alleged psychic abilities tested by a doctor from Cambridge University under the supervision of the broadcaster BBC and obtained good results.
There she calls attention to the knowledge possessed by North African tribes, namely the Dogons,[18] and conducts the reader on a trip across an alleged alien legacy descended from the "tri-star system of Sirius".
Later on she examines the nature of leonine entities from Sirius called Paschats which, conjectures Hope, through the lion goddess Bastet were worshiped in Egypt.