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| From the Ashes of Angels: The Forbidden Legacy of a Fallen Race | 
enlarge | Author: Andrew Collins Publisher: Signet Books Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy Used: £2.84 You Save: £5.15 (64%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 12 reviews Sales Rank: 134264
Media: Paperback Edition: New Ed Pages: 464 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5 x 1.3
ISBN: 0451189264 Dewey Decimal Number: 930 EAN: 9780451189264 ASIN: 0451189264
Publication Date: June 26, 1997 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews: Read 7 more reviews...
Bad January 11, 2007 7 out of 13 found this review helpful
This is the most nonsensical piece of rubbish I have ever read. Collins places himself in a position where he pretends to hold a deep knowledge in Hebrew studies. I have been a student of Hebrew and Semitic studies for many years now and am fluent in Greek and Hebrew with much knowledge in Aramaic, Akkadian and Ugaritic (language and culture). With all this under my belt I can honestly say that his entire topics of the sons of God and Nephilim are nothing more than just misinterpretations molded to fit his theory. If anyone wishes to get into more detail about this or debate about it I am available by e-mail (comments@petroskoutoupis.com) and I also have a forum (www.phpbb88.com/biblicalorigins) where this can all be discussed in further detail. I just wish to warn the reader....stay away from this book, it will poison your mind more than anything else.
Immensely enlightening and thought provoking December 2, 2004 16 out of 16 found this review helpful
I'm not going to add much on the good reviews on the history aspect. I have never ever been one for history...used to make me fall asleep in school but my mind has been opened on reading this to the point I am now reading a number of the titles highlighted within the book From the Ashes of Angels kept me intrigued from cover to cover
Forbidden Legacy of a Fallen Race September 30, 2004 45 out of 46 found this review helpful
Angels...what does that mean to people today. Guardians sent by god to watch over us, spirits that inhabit a parallel dimension or is there a more substantial explaination to their appearance in our history. Andrew Collins seems to think there is. Unlike most of the books that are published on Angels, this is not a New Age search for something to enrich our shallow lives, this is a pure historical detective work, a search for a historical reason for the existance of Angels.A basic recap of the Biblical angle on these characters is in order. The Angels, known more often as Watchers, were the messangers of God, some of whom fell from grace by "knowing" mortal women. The offspring of this union was known as the Nephilim, giants who walk among men. Nowhere does the Bible state that the Watchers had any special powers, not un-natural ones at least. Nor does it state that they where immortal, in fact it almost implys they had a limited life span. Noahs birth is of interest, he is described as being a Nephilim, with caucasian features rather than the dark appearance of his kin. The problem with any work of this nature is trying to remove the later gloss of Christian dogma to try and find the original story. Angels have been made into some chubby little Cherubim by medieval artists and the realities of what they represent has been lost. Once you manage to separate embelished religious nonesense from the fragments of the original mythology a different picture begins to emerge. Appart from the bible itself Collins has found some useful sources. The book of Enoch, for example is a book that although was once part of the original teachings of the christian way, fell out of popularity and was eventually lost. It never became part of the "official" bible and was rediscovered and finally translate in 1821. The Book of Enoch is an account of a mortals journey to the place where the Angels live in the sky. That all sounds a bit fanciful if we believe that they are some sort of spirit guardian of the Christian paradise. If however they where just a slightly advanced but secretive culture living in the mountains, it becomes a lot more plausable. Babylonian mythology comes under scrutiny from Collins new interpretations as does the later writtings of the Angel cults which still thrive to this day amongst the Kurdish tribes of the area. Before you dismiss this as a load of old von Daniken, at no point is Collins suggesting that there where aliens or some super race living unnoticed in the vicinity. More a race of what we call Culture Bringers, a common phenomenon through out ancient history, operating at a respectful distance, but imparting some of its knowledge on the budding civilizations on the plains below. Could this be the origiinal Eden, or paradise itself. Collins study of linguistics from the area shows us the stem of many of the words we now use in a mystical sense that link into the story in a very matter of fact way. The conclusions of the book are fascinating and hold up well to close scrutiny. Any book of this nature can only be the results of one interpretation of the facts, but after reading this I am quite prepared to fight from his corner of the ring. Biblical re-interpretations are always a brave thing to undertake, but what Collins manages to do is unravel and re-examine facts with out in any way undermine anybodies faith. So are the Angels of the Bible a real race, up until now hidden from the distant gaze of modern historians. I think that they just might be, but I`ll let you draw your own conclusions. Anyway Angels as a forgotten race is far more beliveable than a bunch of babies with blond curly locks, wings and harps, don`t you think?
Excellent work September 2, 2004 8 out of 9 found this review helpful
Well written and researched work. This book is like a breeze of fresh air in a subject plagued by either elusive aliens or moralizing speeches of would be modern witch hunters. It does has its mistakes (I for one would like to see more photos of the places or information in which the writer bases his theory) but the author manages to keep an unbiased and unattached point of view to the information about a very conflictive subject.
Nice Work January 2, 2004 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
I was impressed by the authors explicit connections between recurring themes / language. Ok, there is speculation here but he tells us about it rather than hiding it. This book is of course only a fragment in a much bigger picture, with historical revisionism springing up everywhere, but it is a book inspiring enough to be read by itself and left there. This kind of work can be culturally dangerous unless handled sensitively and I beleive that the author managed to stear clear of any diffusionist tendencies. Fascinating stuff and written with a captivating spirit; I read in a small number of sittings, eager to get back into the thread.
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