The Monuments of Mars : A City on the Edge of Forever

by Richard C. Hoagland

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For many years Richard Hoagland alone hypothesized that sentient beings spent time on Mars millions of years ago assembling behemoth structures whose ruins are still seen today. Here Hoagland redefines the solar system as a different place than NASA has presented. The book includes a new preface covering the Mars Global Surveyor photos and NASA's reactions.

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3 reviews
The Monuments Of Mars - A City On The Edge Of Forever by Richard C. Hoagland is a phenomenal expedition into much maligned subject of space oddities du jour.

Predictably, the subject of Mars and evidence of ruins in space of an ancient civilization is one of those subjects that polarizes people between the devout believers, and the skeptics. Regardless of what people believe, however, Hoagland takes an incisive approach in outlining all the data he and his colleagues have collated that reveal that NASA has undertaken a cover up of enormous proportions.

Hoagland searches for artificial evidence from places such as "The Face" of Mars, which was discovered by the Viking Mission, and also gives an in-depth look at Cydonia. In these locales he show more finds geometrically precise anomalies that should not be there whatsoever.

Whether one agrees with Hoagland or not, his reasoned and logical approach is coherent, cogent, and exceptionally academic in its precision. This man [and a whole community of researchers] has found enormous amounts of compelling data that should be taken quite seriously about the artificiality in places like Mars, the Moon, Iapetus and more.

The author also makes a substantial case in connecting the Egyptian Great pyramid to Mars. That in and of itself should be quite troublesome, because, as the author notes:

"...what were the random probabilities that there would exist two isolated worlds, both with "pyramids" and "sphinxes," and now, that the one site on this planet where the most perfect, most archtypal forms still stand - Cairo - would also form the key linguistic bridge that links those worlds...!?"[1][Bold Emphasis Added]

Synchronistically enough, Cairo means Mars in arabic. How about those
apples pyramids?

In its totality, this is a book that should have flipped everything we know about history, space, and more, on its face [no pun intended]. Of course, predictably, that didn't happen.

Which was quite predictable given that the mainstream media is utterly controlled by a handful of corporations - literally [Click Here For More].

That's why it's up to individuals on the grassroots level to examine the book by themselves, and come up to their own conclusions. That's one of the only ways we as a society are going to get at the core of the truth.

Hoagland's breathtaking venture into the fringe has definitely located some data gems that should taken quite seriously and examined at the minimum. If only a sliver of what he says is true, everything in the history of mankind changes forever.
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Author Information

3+ Works 406 Members

Some Editions

McIntosh-McVey, Nancy (Cover artist)
Morrison, Paula (Designer)

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Monuments of Mars : A City on the Edge of Forever
Original publication date
1987
Important places
Mars
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, Science & Nature, General Nonfiction, History
DDC/MDS
999.23History & geographyOceania & Polar RegionsExtraterrestrial worldsPlanets of solar system and their satellitesMars
LCC
QB641 .H63ScienceAstronomyAstronomyDescriptive astronomySolar system
BISAC

Statistics

Members
142
Popularity
229,818
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (3.29)
Languages
English, German
Media
Paper
ISBNs
6
ASINs
2