Imprint: Arrow
Published: 03/02/1997
ISBN: 9780099416364
Length: 432 Pages
Dimensions: 178mm x 27mm x 110mm
Weight: 229g
RRP: £9.99
In Keeper of Genesis, Robert Bauval and Graham Hancock present a tour de force of historical and scientific detective work and answer the following questions:
When and where did history begin?
When was the genesis of civilisation in Egypt?
How and why were the Great Sphinx and the three pyramids of Giza designed to serve as parts of an immense three-dimensional model of the sky of 'First Time'?
What is contained in the rectangular chamber that seismic surveys have located in the bedrock far below the paws of the sphinx?
What lies behind the mysterious doors recently discovered at the end of a previously unexplored shaft inside the Great Pyramid?
And does mankind have a rendezvous with destiny - a rendezvous not in the future, but in the distant past - at a precise place and time?
Using sophisticated computer simulations of the ancient skies to crack the millenial code that the monuments transcribe, Bauval and Hancock set out a startling new theory concerning the Pyramid Texts and other archaic Egyptian scriptures.
Imprint: Arrow
Published: 03/02/1997
ISBN: 9780099416364
Length: 432 Pages
Dimensions: 178mm x 27mm x 110mm
Weight: 229g
RRP: £9.99
The book reads like a detective story, with the reader enthusiastically trying to outguess the writers
Keeper of Genesis is an exciting book, highly topical and deservedly a best-seller
The trick is to keep reading. Start the book in the early evening and continue uninterrupted until you complete it in the small hours. The effect is wonderful... Your entire world view has been shifted a hundred yards to the right. You fall asleep thinking that nothing will ever be the same again