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In Search Of Lemuria by Mark R. Williams

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In Search of Lemuria by Mark Williams explores the fascinatingyet little-known mystery of a lost Pacific continent. The book isstructured around the author's quest to find the lost Pacific continent,as he travels to India, Sumatra, Tonga, Easter Island, Bolivia and manyother places near and far. Along the way he undertakes an inner journeyof discovery as well, while exploring evolution and plate tectonics,quantum mechanics and holograms, Eastern mysticism and "New Age"metaphysics.In Search of Lemuria is intended for a general readership intrigued bylost civilizations, exotic travel destinations, and bizarre customs. Yetit will also appeal to readers curious about the New Age and all itentails, from trance-channeling and fire-walking to reincarnation andmanifestation techniques.In Search of Lemuria fills a profound gap on this important historicalsubject. Currently in print are James Churchward's classic series of"MU" books, written in the 1930s and quaintly dated. Likewise theRosicrucians' odd little tome, Lemuria, The Lost Continent of thePacific (1931) is strictly for MU buffs. David Hatcher Childress's LostCities of Lemuria and the Pacific (1988) is an interesting traveloguediscussing many related subjects, but it is very different in approach.Finally, there are a number of occult titles about channeled lives inLemuria, Ra Mu Speaks, and so on. These appeal to special pockets ofreaders who have already made up their minds about the lost continent.In Search of Lemuria was written for those who want proof that such aplace really existed. And more importantly, readers who seek to know whythe lost Pacific continent is still important today.About the Mark. R. Williams is a freelancewriter living near San Francisco. In Europe he was a regular contributorto the International Herald Tribune (Paris) and staff writer for LookoutMagazine (Spain). Later, he was editor of Chevron USA/Odyssey magazineand a contributor to the Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, SanFrancisco Chronicle, and many other publications. Williams' publishedbooks include Northern Off The Beaten Path and The Story ofSpain. He has an M.A. in history from the University of California,Santa Barbara.

Paperback

First published April 1, 2001

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About the author

Mark R. Williams

6 books2 followers
Mark R. Williams is a freelance writer living near San Francisco. He has also worked as a contributing writer for the International Herald Tribune (Paris) and senior staff writer for Lookout Magazine (Spain). Williams has a Masters degree in History from the University of California, Santa Barbara.

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Profile Image for The Esoteric Jungle.
182 reviews107 followers
July 31, 2019
For someone wounded perhaps a bit too much by the human all too human, modern, superflously unfounded and semi-automatic “skepsis” in his mentation (which Nietszche so beautifully already derailed a century ago), the author has, nonetheless, a good heart and fairly open mind one will see when reading this work of his (regardless what was automatically imbibed by him from being born when and where he was).

If he didn’t start from such limitations of conception (which Buddha centrally said he came to transform) he would have found more as he jetted around the globe...looking for?

While I appreciate people’s love for more materialized and not always just testimonial “facts;” You have to find the right testimonies first usually in searches or you can’t even begin aright. It saves time from going in circles. Only then will you find all material data confirming what many ancients already knew if what they say is so - or not if not. As a journalist you would think he would have known this. He needed the full map before compassing about.

So he approached this search very much cart before the horse prematurely and found little for he started in his understanding inside himself with little overall conception, far from the vast fullness; and so, little materiality could do for him in light of that.

He just didn’t know that over 20 writings in each of all 12 of the main cultures’ lore collections around the globe speak fairly extensively on Lemuria (or “Patala that became Atalas”).

There are a few bits and pieces found in his searches to be commended though. And it is good that he tried.
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