It is readily acknowledged that our time has surpassed all epochs in
history for the accumulation of technical knowledge, physical power over
our environment, and economic might. It is less often pointed out,
however, that our age has generated, and continues to generate, mythical
material almost unparalleled in quantity and quality in the rich
records of human imagination. More precisely, people have very
frequently reported the observation of wonderful aerial objects,
variously designated as flying saucers, unidentified flying objects
(UFOs), and so on; among these narratives descriptions of landings made
by these craft are commonplace; and that quite a few accounts purport to
inform us of the physical characteristics, the psychological behaviour,
and the motivation of their occupants. But investigators have neglected
to recognize one important perspective of the phenomenon: the fact that
beliefs identical to those held today have recurred throughout recorded
history and under forms best adapted to the believer's country, race,
and social regime. If we take a wide sample of this historical material,
we find that it is organized around one central theme: visitation by an
aerial people from one or more remote, legendary countries. The names
and attributes vary, but the main idea clearly does not. Magonia,
heaven, hell, Elfland - all such places have in common one
characteristic: we are unable to reach them alive, except on very
special occasions. Emissaries from these supernatural abodes come to
earth, sometimes under human form and sometimes as monsters. They
perform wonders. They serve man or fight him. They influence
civilizations through mystical revelation. They seduce earth women, and
the few heroes who dare seek their friendship find the girls from
Elfland endowed with desires that betray a carnal, rather than purely
aerial, nature. These matters are the subject of Passport to Magonia,
Jacques Vallee's seminal master-work that changed our understanding of
the UFO phenomenon. An instant classic when first published in 1969, the
book remains a must-have resource for anybody interested in the topics
of UFOs and alien contact, as well as those fascinated by fairy folklore
and other paranormal encounters.
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