Bon état général. Quelques défauts de la jaquettes et quelques annotations
Harold T. Wilkins, the eminent English scholar long known for his studies of ancient South American civilizations, has devoted the past ten years to an exhaustive study of unidentified flying objects. His remarkable book, Flying saucers on the attack, published in 1954, was hailed as "by far the best book on the flying saucer phenomena to date..." (Boston Traveler). Now in his new book, Flying saucers uncensored, Mr. Wilkins has dared to reveal the uncensored truth about the latest developments surrounding space navigational bodies. Page after page of new revelations trace the whole remarkable story up to the summer of 1955, including even a discussion of the epochal announcement of the launching of the earth satellite.
Major attention is paid in this book to what Mr. Wilkins describes as the "Hush-Hush Conspiracy" by official forces in the United States and Europe to suppress information on flying saucers. He cites numerous examples of this suppression and presents facts regarding unidentified flying objects - flying saucers and space ships - that have rarely been made public.
Such chapters as "The Nihilism of the Official Scientists", "Messages from Outer Space", "Strange Stories of Colossal Space Ships", "The Shadow of the Unseen" and "Is There a Cosmis General Staff ?" together with actual photographs in flight, make this the greatest of all books on flying saucers.
Flying saucers uncensored is the book all personnes interested in the whole field of unidentified flying objects have been waiting for - a book crammed full of the most recent revelations about the most signifiant events of our time.
Contents
The coming of the Titans
Mystics, Venusians and hoaxes
Silent Sphinx or Roaring Chimera ?
Messages from outer space
Unseen world without end
Strange stories of Colossal Space Ships
Mystery of the Martian "Death Ceiling"
The shadow of the unseen
The nihilism of the official scientists
Is there a cosmis general staff ?
The Earth's gravest hour
The Citadel Press, 1955, 256 p.