Reeve Robert Brenner

Inspired by his young cousin, Janis Furmansky, who uses a wheelchair after an automobile accident, Brenner came up with a new sport called Bankshot while living in Israel in 1981.

When it was first published the book was clearly a classic, and now, in its revised and updated version it is even more valuable as a resource for our understanding and awareness of the thinking and feelings of those who went through one of the worst tragedies of human history.

- Task, Arnold, Rabbi; book review in The Reform Jewish Quarterly, (Summer 2015)Mind-boggling is my initial response to this magnum opus by Reeve Brenner.

As I am one who claims respectable familiarity with Jewish sources, but only a layman's awareness of Catastrophic Uniformitarian theories about the cosmos, I find Reeve Brenner's focused compendium particularly challenging.

His work presents as a thoroughly researched advocate for Immanuel Velikovsky's multi-works in advancing Catastrophic theories forcing the reevaluation of critical appraisals of what the biblical record really shows.