

And I would reply saying - throughout history, if you took all the tales people have told about seeing things that current science cannot explain - the millions of accounts out there, across the world - it would only take one person to be telling the truth for this whole phenomena to be a real thing. Ever the skeptic (although, it has to be said, less so now than a few years ago), he would say they're probably just making it up. When I first read it, my sons all still lived at home, and I would eagerly tell my eldest the more interesting stories as I progressed through the book. It's filled with strange tales - little snippets of high-weirdness - recounting experiences that people have had and reported, and have very often been ridiculed for. I have a first edition and it's one of my most prized books, even though it's falling apart. In it, he put forth the argument that there are links between the modern UFO phenomena, and folk-tales, myths, and legends from earlier times that feature supernatural beings such as angels, giants, elves, fairies, and devils.

In 1969, French astronomer Jacques Vallee wrote a small book called Passport to Magonia.

Last updated on 5th July 2022īut we have seen and heard of many people overcome with so much foolishness, made crazy by so much stupidity, that they believe and say that there is a certain region, which is called Magonia, from which ships come in the clouds.
