Reddit Reddit reviews Magicians of the Gods: Sequel to the International Bestseller Fingerprints of the Gods

We found 8 Reddit comments about Magicians of the Gods: Sequel to the International Bestseller Fingerprints of the Gods. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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Magicians of the Gods: Sequel to the International Bestseller Fingerprints of the Gods
Thomas Dunne Books
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8 Reddit comments about Magicians of the Gods: Sequel to the International Bestseller Fingerprints of the Gods:

u/zarmin · 5 pointsr/HistoryPorn

People interested in this fascinating topic will no doubt encounter Graham Hancock. Check out his book Magicians of the Gods for some crazy theories about human history.

u/DontTreadOnMe16 · 3 pointsr/conspiracy

And if you like this, then definitely read Graham Hancock's new book, Magicians of the Gods. Mind = Blown

http://www.amazon.com/Magicians-Gods-Forgotten-Wisdom-Civilization/dp/1250045924

u/RDS · 3 pointsr/conspiracy

Ishmael (and the rest of the series) by Daniel Quinn opened my eyes in my senior year of high school.

It's about a Gorilla, who has lived beside man for a number of decades and teaches a pupil through stories and analogies about how we are already at the cusp of civilization collapse. It's about a lot more than just that, namely the relationship of humans, animals, the planet, and how humans have a unique, egotistical view of themselves where we deemed ourselves rulers of the planet.

Confessions of an Economic Hitman by John Perkins is an eye opener as well.

Other great reads:

Magicians of the Gods by Graham Hancock.

Necronomicon

UFO's by Leslie Keen

Siddhartha - Herman Hesse

I also really enjoyed the Myst series by Rand & Robin Miller (the books the game is based on). It's about worlds within worlds and an ancient race of authors creating worlds through magical ink and books (sci-fi/fantasy).

u/hippoCAT · 2 pointsr/history
u/shadowofashadow · 2 pointsr/Psychonaut

>Consider this: For all of the 4000 or so years of recorded history, humans were living in tiny little collectives. There were (for the most part) no roads, no grand cities, no light bulbs, no water systems, very little in the way of governments or hierarchies, etc.

Might want to check out Gobekli Tepi ;) It dates back at least 10,000 years. Our history is probably a lot more interesting than we give credit.

Check out this book, it's a page turner!

http://www.amazon.com/Magicians-Gods-Forgotten-Wisdom-Civilization/dp/1250045924/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1450451934&sr=8-1&keywords=magicians+of+the+gods

u/chevro1et · 1 pointr/Wet_Shavers

I'm currently reading Junkyard Planet which is pretty interesting to me, since I have worked in steelyards and scrapyards on a couple different occasions in my life.

I just finished up Magicians of the Gods which I found very interesting since I am a Physical Geography major, and took a few geoarchaeology courses in my undergrad degree.

u/TheWarpedOne · 1 pointr/todayilearned

If this interests you there is a surprising amount of scientific information outlined in this book that may indicate some truth the legends.

https://www.amazon.com/Magicians-Gods-International-Bestseller-Fingerprints/dp/1250045924

u/Downvote_the_Facts · 1 pointr/JordanPeterson

Great Ancient archeology books


[Fingerprints of the Gods](
https://www.amazon.com/Fingerprints-Gods-Graham-Hancock/dp/0517887290)

Magicians of the Gods


Both by Graham Hancock