2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl
2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl by Daniel Pinchbeck
2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl by Daniel Pinchbeck, a book exploring the Mayan Calendars’ predictions of 2012, has sold tens of thousands of copies, making it one of the best selling books about the “impending apocalypse.”
***PURCHASE 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl NOW***
Synopsis of 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl
A literary and metaphysical epic that binds together the cosmological phenomena of our time to support the contention of the Mayan calendar that the year 2012 portends an unprecedented global shift.
Cross Aldous Huxley, H. P. Lovecraft, and Carlos Castaneda—each imbued with a twenty-first century aptitude for quantum theory and existential psychology—and you get the voice of Daniel Pinchbeck. And yet, nothing quite prepares us for the lucidity, rationale, and informed audacity of this seeker, skeptic, and cartographer of hidden realms.
Throughout the 1990s, Pinchbeck had been a member of New York’s literary select. He wrote for publications such as The New York Times Magazine, Esquire, and Harper’s Bazaar. His first book, Breaking Open the Head, was heralded as the most significant on psychedelic experimentation since the work of Terence McKenna.
But slowly something happened: Rather than writing from a journalistic remove, Pinchbeck—his literary powers at their peak—began to participate in the shamanic and metaphysical belief systems he was encountering. As his psyche and body opened to new experiences, disparate threads and occurrences made sense like they had never before. Humanity, every sign pointed, is precariously balanced between greater self-potential and environmental disaster. The Mayan calendar’s “end date” of 2012 seems to define our present age: It heralds the end of one way of existence and the return of another, in which the serpent god Quetzalcoatl reigns anew, bringing with him an unimaginably ancient—yet, to us, wholly new—way of living.
A result not just of study but also of participation, 2012 tells the tale of a single man in whose trials we ultimately recognize our own hopes and anxieties about modern life.
Praise for 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl
Daniel Pinchbeck…is rapidly becoming our generation’s foremost proponent of controlled psychedelic experimentation. — The Nation
Pinchbeck presents the most fascinating publishing oddity of the season. In almost 400 pages of handsome prose, the author riffs on Einstein, Nietzsche, Stonehenge, Hopi mythology, and alternate states of consciousness. — Time Out New York
Pinchbeck’s exotic epic is a paradigm-buster capable of forcing the most cynical reader outside her comfort zone. — Publishers Weekly
In 2012, his part memoir, part anthropological journey through many things spiritual, metaphysical, and just plain eerie, Pinchbeck illuminates not the world’s end but the many ways in which our social structures are disintegrating.…Into 2012 Pinchbeck fits Jung, crop circles, Martin Heidegger’s critique of technology, the ecological theories of Rudolf Steiner, the parables of Christ, Jared Diamond’s Collapse, and even the confessions of Whitley Strieber…a box of treasures. — LA Weekly
A ride worth taking, partly for the wild entertainment value but also because the book is a document with genuine sociopolitical relevance.…Pinchbeck delivers his eco-political message in the form of a syncretic mad masterpiece. — Reason Magazine
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