Sunday, January 12, 2025

SOME TRUST IN CHARIOTS edited by Barry Thiering and Edgar Castle






Some trust in chariots and some in horses, but we trust in the name of the LORD our God. They are brought to their knees and fall, but we rise up and stand firm.

Psalms 20:7-8 New International Version (NIV)
New year, new BOMBSHELL books with the IRREFUTABLE TRUTH about man's ancient past! Lancer doesn't tip their hand at all with the presentation, packaging this volume as just another Chariots follower, but how many readers got a shock when they actually started reading and found this to be a fairly dry, thorough analysis of von Daniken's lies, blunders, and misrepresentations? The editors have assembled a broad board of experts - mostly Australian, it turns out, and spurred to action by the thus far lackluster critical response to von Daniken's bestselling bollocks.

Theologians and archaeologists, an engineer and an anonymous wag, one thing you start to realize when reading this volume is how many disciplines von Daniken mangled with Chariots of the Gods? and how much effort it takes to straighten things out. Von Daniken bungles basic facts and figures, not even getting into the alien side of things yet. Says Professor Basil Hennessy


There's some focus on von Daniken's use of the pseudohistorical idea of Queztalcoatl as a white god, but this volume is mostly concerned with academic corrections, and we're still a few years off from von Daniken's Signs of the Gods wherein he ponders black people being a failed alien experiment engineered for music and basketball. The racial implications of white star gods raising/engineering nonwhite ancient peoples will only become more evident over the decades, but for now in 1972 these academic writers were staking out a rather lonely position standing against von Daniken's blockbuster cultural phenomenon.



It's frustrating to read this volume 50+ years on and see the same old busted "evidence" trotted out in favor of von Daniken's chariots. Things like the Piri Reis map, the Nazca lines, misrepresentation of the Easter Island moai and pyramid construction ... on and on it goes. There's some dry humor here and there as evidenced by Professor Hennessy's callout above, and the final chapter is a fun exercise titled "Was Santa a Spaceman?"


Some Trust in Chariots
is available to read and download at archive dot org.

Lancer Books, 1972

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