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Flying Saucers Have Landed

por Desmond Leslie, George Adamski

Otros autores: Ver la sección otros autores.

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771347,091 (3.5)1
Añadido recientemente porRnP-Lib, VCAS, Romero_Institute, dylanedgar, Petronio_Souza, Proclus, jolanimus
Bibliotecas heredadasJackie Gleason
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Flying Saucers have landed, by Desmond Leslie and George Adamski, 1953.

This may be the first contactee book ever printed. It is actually two books in one. Leslie wrote the first book consisting of 170 pages of what could be called a standard UFO review. It lists countless cases of UFO sightings, “Captain Smith, while flying from San Diego to Sacramento, saw a blue orb over the left wing at 12:58 am” and so on. He also discusses flying saucers in the ancient literature, in Atlantis,, and in prophecy. It is a straightforward review with absolutely no contact information. Book Two is Adamski’s short contribution of only fifty pages. He was an amateur astronomer living on the slopes of Mt. Palomar with a sweeping view. He saw his first spacecraft in 1946. Over the years he saw and photographed many more. He began to lecture on the subject showing his photographs. As more and more people asked for copies he began to charge for them, but only to reimburse himself for developing expenses. He made no money off the pictures, he says. Even the Naval Electronics Laboratory asked him to take a few pictures for them. Apparently he was in the restaurant business, which was helped by his growing popularity, though Adamski says he was not an owner. Sources say he was a short order cook.

Finally, on November 20, 1952 Adamski met his first alien. He says he acted on intuition when he and three other people drove about ten miles into the desert to look for flying saucers. They had stopped for a picnic in the desert and just brought out their cameras when airplanes began buzzing overhead. It didn’t take long to realize the planes were chasing saucers. Adamski knew the UFO was looking for him, personally, so he asked his friends to take him down the road (with his telescope and camera) and drop him off. They were to wait for an hour, observing him from a distance with their binoculars. After he set up he saw a person in the distance.

As Adamski grew closer he saw the man had long blonde hair and wore brown ski trousers (actually a one-piece with a wide belt) along with ox-blood shoes. Size 9 or 9 ½.
He was 5 foot six, 135 pounds, about 28 years old. His gray-green eyes were at a slight slant with high cheek bones and beautiful white teeth and a nice smile. They began to speak to each other in a combination of sign language and telepathy. The alien said he was from Venus and that all the planets were inhabited. He said the atomic weapons on earth were affecting other planets because when they exploded, their effect was enhanced in the medium of space and affected the other planets, therefore we needed to stop exploding them.

The visitor, unnamed, and Adamski discussed God. The Venusians live according to the Will of the Creator where we on earth live by personal will. Visitors to earth are from all planets and many other systems as well and that the humanoid form was universal. We all look pretty much alike. Adamski wanted to take the alien’s picture, but was refused. The issue was security for those aliens who walk among us. With better telescopes we will be able to see the nature of the other planets in the solar system, all thriving with civilizations. As their visit grew to a close Adamski gave the alien one of his photographic plates. The alien promised to return it.

Post #2

As the alien flew away in the saucer Adamski noticed his footprints had left deep impressions in the earth. Reunited with his friends they pulled some plaster of Paris out of the car (they just happened to have some) and made impressions. The soles of the alien’s shoes had strange markings on them that were meant to convey some as yet undeciphered message. These are produced in the book. Continued next post.

On December 13, 1953 Adamski knew the craft was returning. He returned to the site of their first meeting. The craft descended. A porthole opened, and a hand dropped the film plate to the ground, then waved before the craft took off again. He assumed it was his friend, but did not actually see him. As promised, the film plate was returned, but the impression on the film was of some alien writing—yet to be deciphered. Government agents came to Adamski at his request and listened to his story, but asked no questions. They did take a couple of photographs Adamski had made of the craft.

Adamski’s conclusion to these events is that the space aliens are friendly and among us, if only we can learn from them. This is the conclusion of the first (50 page) book written by George Adamski. There are several other books, to be reviewed later.

Adamski was born in Poland in 1891 and died in 1965. His Wikipedia article is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Adamski.
  mschuyler | Oct 21, 2007 |
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Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
Leslie, Desmondautor principaltodas las edicionesconfirmado
Adamski, Georgeautor principaltodas las edicionesconfirmado
Mallory, PhilippeTraductorautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
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I would like to dedicate Book One to Shaun and to Christopher-Mark, who will know much more about these things than their father by the time they are grown up.
--Desmond Leslie
Book Two of this work is dedicated to People, everywhere and in every world.
July 1953
--George Adamski
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[Foreword] About eighteen million years ago, say the strange and ancient legends of our little planet, at a time when Mars, Venus and Earth were in close conjunction, along a magnetic path so formed came a huge, shining, radiant vessel of dazzling power and beauty, bringing to earth 'thrice thirty-five' human beings, of perfection beyond our highest ideals; gods rather than men; divine kings of archaic memory, under whose benign world-government a shambling, hermaphrodite monster was evolved into thinking sexual man.
Ever since the cliché 'flying saucer' was coined, the greatest and most exciting mystery of our age has been automatically reduced to the level of a music hall joke.
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