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Fingerprints Of The Gods: The International Bestseller From the Creator of Netflix’s ‘Ancient Apocalypse’. Paperback – 5 April 2001

4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 6,123 ratings

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THE MILLIONS-SELLING BOOK THAT TURNED HISTORY ON ITS HEAD


Fingerprints of the Gods is a revolutionary rewrite of history that has persuaded millions of readers throughout the world to change their preconceptions about the history behind modern society.

An intellectual detective story, this unique history book directs probing questions at orthodox history, presenting disturbing new evidence that historians have tried - but failed - to explain.

This groundbreaking evidence includes:

· Accurate ancient maps that show the world as it last looked during the Ice Age, thousands of years before any civilisation capable of making such maps is supposed to have existed.
· Evidence of the devastating scientific and astronomical information encoded into prehistoric myths.
· The incredible feat of the construction of the great pyramids of Egypt and of megalithic temples on the Giza plateau.
· The mysterious astronomical alignments of the pyramids and the Great Sphinx.
· The antediluvian geology of the Sphinx.
· The megalithic temples of the Andes.
· The myths of Viracocha and Quetzalcoatl.
· The pyramids of the Sun and the Moon in Mexico.
· The doomsday calendar and eerie memories of the ancient Maya.
· The warning from the Hopi of Arizona.

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Product description

Review

Intriguing ― Sunday Times

Hancock challenges orthodox history with extraordinary theories of a vanished early civilisation destroyed by a cataclysm... However heretical his arguments, his sweep through the ancient world is arresting and audacious ―
Daily Mail

From the Publisher

Publisher Comment
Every once in a while there is a book that places a very large question mark against the accepted view of history. An example is Ignatius Donnelly's Atlantis, which was published in 1882, and inspired a whole new genre of book in the late Victorian era.

The equivalent book today is Graham Hancock's Fingerprints of the Gods. Since its publication in 1995, hundreds of writers have followed in Hancock's footsteps, but he has sold and continues to sell more than any of his followers, and on the 'alternative history' lecture circuit he remains the greatest draw.

There are several reasons for this, I believe. As a former Financial Times journalist, Hancock did not enter the subject area as a 'believer', and the text has all the excitement of discovery about it. The reader is drawn in to the theories in tandem with the author, who writes in such a way that the reader's mind races ahead, trying to get to all the connections before the author does - a are gift in narrative non-fiction. Quite difficult ideas are dealt with deftly and in a way which does not impede the narrative flow. And lastly there is the book's ambition, its boldness. Here is a complete history of everything in the world ever. Very few writers can pull this off, but when they do, they are usually rewarded with very large sales.

All this not only makes Fingerprints the biggest best-seller in the area, it also makes it the book that career academics hate the most. It is not that it espouses levitating blocks of granite or channelled agony aunt advice from an ancient Egyptian priestess or Atlantean black magic bringing on the floods, but in view of the howls of execration it provokes, it might as well do. Perhaps these academics' reasoning runs along similar lines to 'if smoke dope, you'll be on heroine next'?

My own interpretation is that the people who hate Hancock - as I say, mostly academics - are militant materialists who have a horror of the spiritual. They may say they are spiritual, but what they mean by that word is something like 'keen on finding moral and aesthetic values', such as having a feeling of wonder when they look at a night sky, which isn't what the word means at all. Now again, Fingerprints isn't a book that espouses spiritual values, at least not openly, but Hancock has since become something of a spiritual leader to his many followers.

The odd thing about these purportedly high-minded militant materialists is that they are prepared to resort to dishonesty in debate, so keen are they to stamp out the spiritual element. No doubt it's all for a higher good.

In December 2000 a BBC Horizon programme about Graham Hancock and Robert Bauval, author of another ground-breaking book in the area, The Orion Mystery and co-author with Graham of Keeper of Genesis, made them look bad. The programme was based largely on interviews with them which they felt had been edited in an unfair way. Their complaint to the Broadcasting Standards Commission was in part upheld, and when the documentary was re-shown, it was with changes, but not as many as the authors would have liked. This new edition contains the full transcripts of the tapes so that the reader can make up his/her mind, together with a new introduction which gives the state of play in the arguments for and against the antediluvian civilisation. It also contains 16 pages of beautiful new photographs by Graham's wife Santha.

Fingerprints of the Gods was the book which started the debate in our time, and this new edition also makes it the most up-to-date book on the vital issues.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 0712679065
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Century; 1st edition (5 April 2001)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 768 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9780712679060
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0712679060
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 15.3 x 4.5 x 23.4 cm
  • Customer reviews:
    4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 6,123 ratings

About the author

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Graham Hancock
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I am the author of Magicians of the Gods, published on 10 September 2015, and of the major international bestsellers The Sign and the Seal, Fingerprints of the Gods, Heaven's Mirror, Underworld, and Supernatural.

I share below the story of the journey that led me to these books

In the early 1980's, when I was East Africa correspondent of The Economist, writing about wars, politics, economics and aid programmes, I had no idea where fate was going to lead me or what strange seas of thought I would find myself sailing on. But in 1983 I made my first visit to Axum in northern Ethiopia, then in the midst of a war zone, and found myself in the presence of an ancient monk outside a little chapel in the grounds of the cathedral of Saint Mary of Zion. The monk told me that the chapel was the sanctuary of the Ark of the Covenant and that he was the guardian of the Ark, the most sacred relic of the Bible, supposedly lost since Old Testament times. What he said seemed ludicrous but for some reason it intrigued me. I began to look into the Ethiopian claim and found much surprising and neglected evidence that supported it, not least the faint traces of a mission to Ethiopia undertaken by the Knights Templar in the twelfth century. I kept adding to that dossier of evidence while also continuing to pursue my current affairs interests (including Lords of Poverty, my controversial book about foreign aid, published in 1989), and finally, in 1992, I published The Sign and the Seal: A Quest for the Lost Ark of the Covenant, my first full-fledged investigation of a historical mystery.

As well as to Ethiopia and to Israel, my research for The Sign and the Seal had taken me to Egypt and opened my eyes to the incredible enigma of the Great Pyramid of Giza, while the "technological" aspects of the Ark (shooting out bolts of fire, striking people dead, etc) had alerted me to the existence of out of place technologies in antiquity. The stage was now set for my next project - a worldwide investigation into the possibility of a lost, prehistoric civilisation that resulted, in 1995, in the publication of Fingerprints of the Gods, undoubtedly my best known book. Keeper of Genesis (co-authored with Robert Bauval) followed in 1996, looking specifically into the mysteries of the Great Sphinx of Giza, and then in 1998 Heaven's Mirror, photographed by my wife Santha Faiia, which shows why many ancient sites in all parts of the globe replicate the patterns of constellations on the ground and are aligned to important celestial events such as the rising points of the sun on the equinoxes and the solstices. In 2002, I published Underworld, the result of five years of scuba diving across all the world's oceans to find ancient ruins submerged by rising sea levels at the end of the Ice Age.

After Underworld, I decided to step away from lost civilisation mysteries for a while and my next non-fiction book, Supernatural: Meetings with the Ancient Teachers of Mankind, published in 2005, focussed on shamanism, altered states of consciousness and the astonishing universal themes that appear in rock and cave art from deepest antiquity right through to the paintings done by shamans in the Amazon rainforest today.

From my years as a journalist I've always distrusted armchair theorising and believed I have a responsibility to seek out direct personal, "boots on the ground" experience of what I'm writing about. That was why I did five years of often difficult and dangerous scuba diving for Underworld. And it's also why, as part of my research for Supernatural I travelled to the Amazon to drink the visionary brew Ayahuasca with shamans there. As well as better equipping me to write Supernatural, my experiences in the Amazon changed my life and brought out a new side of my own creativity. I've continued working with Ayahuasca ever since and in 2006, during a series of sessions in Brazil, in a ceremonial space overlooked by images of a blue goddess, my visions gave me the basic characters, dilemmas and plot of the book that would become my first novel, Entangled, published in 2010. Entangled tells the story of two young women, one living 24,000 years ago in the Stone Age, and the other in modern Los Angeles, who are brought together by a supernatural being to do battle with a demon who travels through time.

Since the publication of Entangled I have also written the first two volumes of a series of three epic novels about the Spanish conquest of Mexico - the War God trilogy. The first volume, War God: Nights of the Witch, was published in 2013, and the second volume, War God: Return of the Plumed Serpent, was published in 2014. The third volume, War God: Apocalypse, is already more than half written and will be completed in 2016 and in the meantime my new non-fiction book, Magicians of the Gods, was published on 10 September 2015. Magicians is the sequel to Fingerprints of the Gods, and presents all the new evidence that has emerged since 1995 for a great lost civilisation of prehistoric antiquity and for the global cataclysm that destroyed that civilisation almost 13,000 years ago - a cataclysm on such a scale that it forced mankind, as Plato put it, "to begin again like children with no memory of what went before."

My ideas on prehistory and on the mysterious nature of reality have made me something of a controversial figure. In 1999, for example BBC Horizon made a documentary ("Atlantis Reborn") attacking my position on the lost civilisation. But part of that documentary was found by the UK's Broadcasting Standards Commission to be unfair - the first time ever that the flagship Horizon series had been judged guilty of unfairness. The BBC took the problem seriously enough to put out a revised re-edited version of the programme a year later. More recently, in 2013, my TED talk "The War on Consciousness" was deleted from the TED Youtube channel on grounds that TED itself later admitted to be spurious by striking out every one of the objections it had originally raised to my talk. TED, however, refused to restore the talk to its Youtube channel resulting in dozens of pirate uploads all over the internet that have now registered well over a million views.

I make mistakes like everyone else, but ever since my time with The Economist I've felt it is important to strive for rigour and accuracy, to check facts, to set out my sources clearly and openly for all to see and to admit my mistakes when I make them. As I continue to explore extraordinary ideas in my works of non-fiction, and in my novels, I'll also continue to do that.

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4.6 out of 5 stars
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Customers say

Customers find the book thought-provoking and engaging. They find it well-researched and insightful, providing detailed knowledge and perspective. The writing style is praised as clear and readable. Readers appreciate the attention to detail and value for money. Many consider it a worthwhile gift.

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124 customers mention ‘Thought provoking’124 positive0 negative

Customers find the book thought-provoking and engaging. It challenges assumptions and receive ideas about the subject. Readers appreciate the author's balanced way of describing relevant topics.

"...of traditional research and scholarship, find the important, game changing insights, couple them with expert insight, and provide the groundwork for..." Read more

"This book is a terrific read, especially if you are cognizant with the subject matter to start with, if you are not it may be a difficult starter..." Read more

"...I feel that Hancock genuinely tries to stick to the facts and draw his own conclusions, even if (like everyone else) he can at times see those..." Read more

"Very thought provoking book. Any one with half a brain who studies world history to a reasonable level comes up with a few unexplained observations...." Read more

48 customers mention ‘History knowledge’48 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's history knowledge. They find it well-researched, providing detailed information and insights. The analysis and perspective are thought-provoking, with compelling evidence and data. The book provides a good overview of history, giving an idea of what empires fitted in.

"...scholarship, find the important, game changing insights, couple them with expert insight, and provide the groundwork for a potent challenge to..." Read more

"...that try to re-evaluate the past but also amongst there is solid evidence that is simply ignored by historians and so called "experts"...." Read more

"...Immense referencing and research, no doubt the result of excellent journalistic training...." Read more

"...beautifully illustrated questioning of our past history accompanied with thorough analysis that is shaking the Archeologists who have imposed a sort..." Read more

21 customers mention ‘Readable writing’18 positive3 negative

Customers find the writing engaging and well-written. They describe the author as an excellent writer and storyteller. The book is described as worth reading and a master storyteller.

"...His writing manages to impart enthusiasm to the reader and takes you along on a enthralling journey...." Read more

"What a ride. Articulating far better than I ever could what I have quietly believed to be the case for so long. Human history is old - very old...." Read more

"...He is a master storyteller" Read more

"...I now have the Kindle version, which is so much easier to read (I have a real problem with big heavy books nowadays)...." Read more

9 customers mention ‘Presentation’9 positive0 negative

Customers find the book's presentation compelling and enlightening. They appreciate the fabulous photos and attention to detail. The book gives them a new perspective on ancient man, with remarkable similarities between figures like Viracocha, Osiris, and Noah. It is well-edited and worthwhile reading for anyone interested in the subject.

"...Amongst these are the remarkable similarities of figures such as Viracocha, Osiris and Noah, the compelling fact that almost all mythologies speak..." Read more

"Truly outstanding read by a pioneer of the genre! Hancock's masterpiece!..." Read more

"The author has got a beautiful and balanced way to describe various relevant topics alongside his personal explorations...." Read more

"Great book. Very compelling evidence well presented and enlightening throughout." Read more

7 customers mention ‘Value for money’7 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's value for money. They say it's worth it.

"Good products and value for money." Read more

"Took a while to get through, but it has many pages. Worth the money...." Read more

"...Well worth it." Read more

"...A must read for all with enquiring minds. My advise buy it now excellent value and will give you hours of thought Terry" Read more

4 customers mention ‘Gift value’4 positive0 negative

Customers find the book a good gift for their children.

"Presents for both my sons. I read the book years ago and found it superbly researched. Now we have new findings in it." Read more

"Brought as Christmas present" Read more

"gift for someone, they are very happy with it." Read more

"Was a gift and was well recieved." Read more

The Gods
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The Gods
Gonna be an enlightening read💯Defo recommended
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Top reviews from United Kingdom

  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 14 July 2015
    Graham Hancock has provided both a page-turner, and a groundbreaking work of truly revolutionary research. Fingerprints of the Gods is both a historical who dunnit, a travelogue, and a prophecy of doom. As for the latter, that is perhaps what this work has become best known for, namely as the direct inspiration behind Roland Emmerich's 2012, and indeed the work on possible global cataclysms dominates the last chapter of the book.
    However, the true strength of the book is Hancock's convincing case of a lost civilization, possibly situated in Antarctica (Hancock does not speak with certainty on this matter) that served as the precursor of all the New World and Old World Civilizations, and how certain features cannot be ruled out as coincidence. Amongst these are the remarkable similarities of figures such as Viracocha, Osiris and Noah, the compelling fact that almost all mythologies speak of a deluge, or some kind of preceding cataclysm, and the reality of star maps corresponding to ancient structures, such as Tiotihuacan, and the Pyramids at Giza.
    The central thesis is that this civilization was destroyed by a cataclysm, and it's knowledge perished with it. Knowledge that orthodox understanding of history vastly underestimates.
    Why do I rate Graham Hancock when some dismiss him as a Pseudo-Archaeologist? Because his work encompasses first class, cutting edge research, and his theories are backed up by experts within the field.
    Graham Hancock has provided us with the insight, and necessary precision to look beyond the prejudices of traditional research and scholarship, find the important, game changing insights, couple them with expert insight, and provide the groundwork for a potent challenge to traditional scholarship on the division between ancient history, and pre-history.
    Graham Hancock is modest in his approach. He does not offer conclusions on his work, and does not speak with certainty of a civilization within Antartica, rather he simply posits it as a possibility.
    Fingerprints is a divisive book, but it has at least made a believer out of me with regard to his theories on the ancient world. I am somewhat of a skeptic toward doomsaying, however, Hancock's scholarship on the ancient world is first class, informative, and in all, makes for a true page-turner.
    11 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 March 2024
    This book is a terrific read, especially if you are cognizant with the subject matter to start with, if you are not it may be a difficult starter book. There is plenty to get to grips with, (the subject matter and quantity at 720 pages with photograph plates). Graham Hancock challenges conventional thinking in his writing and with his analysis of ancient sites i.e. the Nazca spider, Pacal's sarcophagus and Machu Picchu to name but three. His writing manages to impart enthusiasm to the reader and takes you along on a enthralling journey. Highly recommended unless you are unfamiliar with ancient sites and myths. I'll revisit my review when I've completed the book.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 17 April 2022
    I wasn't impressed at all by the early part of this book. The arguments put forward did not seem convincing and it was poorly written. I persisted though and I'm glad I did. It takes digestion of the whole book to actually see that the writer is onto something. The problem is that the book is badly structured. Rather than being written in a planned way which might pull the reader into his theories, it seems more like reading his notes in the order he wrote them. It has some great content though which really makes you think. You don't have to agree with him in order to make this a worthwhile read. Even if he doesn't convince you that he does have all the answers, hopefully he will convince you that there are some genuine mystery's out there that maybe you might find your own answers to.

    I have a PhD in biochemistry and let me tell you how academia works. Scientists (historians are similar) are like sheep they all nod their head in agreement as regards to the accepted theory. They don't like to step out of line and be ridiculed for having an alternative view. When the theory gets debunked (usually by the 'leader' in the field) and a new theory is accepted, its frightening how quickly they all adopt it (and the data they are generating and publishing, suddenly shifts from supportive of the old theory to supportive of the new theory).

    We need people like Hancock to challenge accepted wisdom...they don't have to be right to make a difference. There are other 'alternative' historians who will try to trick you by telling you half truths etc about the facts, just to sell their whacky theory. These guys we don't need. I feel that Hancock genuinely tries to stick to the facts and draw his own conclusions, even if (like everyone else) he can at times see those facts the way that suits him.

    Don't expect and easy or enjoyable read though. At least not for the first half of a very long tome of a book.
    51 people found this helpful
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  • GWANGMUK
    5.0 out of 5 stars Fun book
    Reviewed in Canada on 5 March 2025
    Interesting context
  • NKTT
    5.0 out of 5 stars Mind opening, evidence packed
    Reviewed in the United States on 27 January 2025
    Graham perfectly presented evidence so we can question everything we know about the world. I like the touch of religion too. Amazing. Eyeopening.
  • Mário Soster Neto
    5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful edition
    Reviewed in Brazil on 7 October 2024
    A really nice piece. Shout out to the packaging employees for the exceptional job.
  • Ahmet Arif
    5.0 out of 5 stars Loved it
    Reviewed in Germany on 5 February 2024
    Very nice. You can read it several times, since its very informative. Very detailed.
    I have not finished it so far, almost half through, since I sometimes read the same capital twice of more and then talk about it at work the next day. Nice icebreaker and super interesting.
  • Umberto Mazzella
    5.0 out of 5 stars Interessantissimo.
    Reviewed in Italy on 9 October 2021
    Masterpiece. Tutti dovrebbero leggerlo
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    Umberto Mazzella
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Interessantissimo.

    Reviewed in Italy on 9 October 2021
    Masterpiece. Tutti dovrebbero leggerlo
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