Mini Review of Journeys to the Mythical Past

Journeys to the Mythical Past by Zecharia SitchinJust when I think that Zecharia Sitchin can’t shock or amaze me anymore he comes out with yet another revealing book. In this case its, Journeys to the Mythical Past, which happens to be both his latest book and his second book this year.

Journeys to the Mythical Past is the continuing autobiographical account of the investigations and discoveries that led to The Earth Chronicles series. Now, this part confuses me but the Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data also notes that this is book II of the Earth chronicles expeditions. And yet, throughout this book, Sitchin refers to The End of Days, which came out earlier this year, as the concluding volume of The Earth Chronicles. I guess, it doesn’t really matter; its just I like to keep things straight in my mind. Sitchin’s books are mind boggling enough as is.

In any event, here are some of the things that Sitchin covers in Journeys to the Mythical Past:

- Zecharia Sitchin reveals for the first time how his life was at risk inside the Great Pyramid and documents the existence of a secret chamber. (Entertaining and fascinating to say the least!)

- Reports on Vatican encounters, (This is quite amazing and very informative.)

- The Iceman of the Alps, (I found this cool; no pun intended.)

- The Antikythera computer, (This part was utterly mind blowing!)

- The temples and Ruts of Malta, (Sitchin ferrets out the mysteries to these enigmas.)

- And offers a solution to the enigma of the Nazca lines. (If you’re familiar with Sitchin’s work, this won’t surprise you.)

I’m probably going to have to go back to this book because like Sitchin’s eleven other books that I’ve read, Journeys to the Mythical Past is packed with information and data that often requires a lot of reflection, I find. I managed to read this book last week over the course of three evenings and my mind is saturated and mulling over what all he wrote about.

I think that Journeys to the Mythical Past is a great addition to our Sitchin library. It confirms some of the things that I’ve always wondered about and it brings new proof that things weren’t quite what the history books say they were when it comes to both technologies that were available in the past and the types of people and beings that wandered this earth before us.