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Confessions of an Egyptologist : lost libraries, vanished labyrinths, and the astonishing truth under the Saqqara pyramids / Erich von Däniken ; translated by Bernhard Sulzer.

Confessions of an Egyptologist : lost libraries, vanished labyrinths, and the astonishing truth under the Saqqara pyramids / Erich von Däniken ; translated by Bernhard Sulzer.
Item Information
Shelf Location Collection Volume Ref. Branch Status Due Date
001.942 DANI
Adult Non Fiction   Bankstown . . Available .  
. Catalogue Record 1213738 ItemInfo . Catalogue Record 1213738 ItemInfo Top of page .
Catalogue Information
Field name Details
ISBN 9781632651914 (paperback)
Name Däniken, Erich von, 1935- author.
Uniform title Bekenntnisse des Ägyptologen Adel H. English
Title Confessions of an Egyptologist : lost libraries, vanished labyrinths, and the astonishing truth under the Saqqara pyramids / Erich von Däniken ; translated by Bernhard Sulzer.
Published Newburyport, MA : New Page, 2021.
©2021
Description x, 190 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some colour) ; 22 cm
Notes Includes bibliographical references (pages 181-187).
Summary In this book, Erich von Däniken shares the story of his friend Adel H., an Egyptologist, who, as a 16-year-old boy, was trapped for days under the Step Pyramid of Saqqara. Based on his conversations with Adel H., he retells the boy's search for a way out of the underground world, how the boy roamed passageways and chambers and saw what he calls "impossible" things of which the professional world is completely unaware. Adel experienced uncanny events, a mixture of spirit realm and reality, which is described here for the first time. "The story of Egypt," Adel says, "has two sides-the official one and the unknown one." It is secrets like the sights and events Adel experiences underground that von Däniken refers to throughout this book. Von Däniken shows that the Great Pyramid of Giza is nothing but a huge library created for the people of the future. He proves his claim through quotes from the few ancient works that still survive. Who actually had an interest for millennia in destroying knowledge/books? It's not about a few thousand, but about millions of books. Von Däniken documents the fanatical destructive rage of the people and means: If we would only have one ten-thousandth of the former writings, human prehistory would have to be completely rewritten. And where are the lost labyrinths? The one of Crete and the gigantic labyrinth of Egypt, of which all ancient historians reported? Against the background of these revelations, von Däniken turns the spot on to another focus of his book. A paradigm shift in the question of extraterrestrial life: The gods have already come back. They came down again. They are currently orbiting our planet!
Language note Translation from the German.
Subjects Human-alien encounters
Occultism
Pyramids -- Egypt
Other Names Sulzer, Bernhard translator.
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