Additional information
Full Title | Coup D’État in the Land of Zep Tepi A Progress Report |
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Author(s) | Buiteboer |
Edition | |
ISBN | 9781482875621, 9781482875614 |
Publisher | Partridge Publishing Africa |
Format | PDF and EPUB |
Original price was: $3.99.$1.00Current price is: $1.00.
Access Coup D’État in the Land of Zep Tepi A Progress Report Now. Discount up to 90%
Full Title | Coup D’État in the Land of Zep Tepi A Progress Report |
---|---|
Author(s) | Buiteboer |
Edition | |
ISBN | 9781482875621, 9781482875614 |
Publisher | Partridge Publishing Africa |
Format | PDF and EPUB |
If you have ever wondered where the human obsession with the apocalypse comes from, if you ever wanted to know why the world did not come to an end on 21 December 2012, as prophesied by the Mayan calendar and propagated by paranoid apocalyptomaniacs, then Coup Dtat in the Land of Zep Tepi: A Progress Report, is for you. But why?
Story Hunter out on a harebrained mission from Juba (capital of the newly independent Republic of Southern Sudan) to Lake Mwitanzige (named Lake Albert in colonial lingo) stumbles upon a legend somewhere in the depths of Central Africa. This will in due course turn out to be one of the most controversial discoveries to jump from the mists of mythological time into the twenty-first century. To be precise, on the border between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda, a legend speaks about the disappearance of a tribe called Bachwezi into Lake Mwitanzige.
This exposes information concerning goings-on in ancient Egypt around 1450 BC. Story Hunter and Buiteboers research reveals that the Bachwezi had fled from Egypt into the depths of Central Africa. They fled from Pharaoh Akhnaten, who had out of the blue imposed a religious singularity on the ancient lands that bore a multiplicity of gods, goddesses, demigods, and godlike human pharaonic rulers.
The publication of this story in turn upsets a delicate balance of forces in the realm of the heavens. It speculates that the Bachwezi may have found, in Lake Mwitanzige, a portal by way of which to transmigrate and take the rebellion against a prophecy of their doom, expressed by the singularity Akhnaten, off the world. Did they make a quantum leap of faith, like Gilgamesh, the demigod king of Uruk, to postlife outerplanetary realms where the gods reside?
After the Uganda discovery, the report accounts how while on a side journey through Mozambiques Zambezi Valley, where the Cahora Basa dam lies, Story Hunter is ambushed by a strange old man. He shows Story Hunter how, in precolonial times, the Songo people built a tower to reach heaven. This causes Story Hunter to be catapulted into an off-world realm where it becomes clear that all is not what it seems in Kosher, Vegan, or even Halaal in the postlife off-worldly realms. Will it turn out that the Bachwezi may in fact have staged an insurgency or are plotting a coup in the land of Zep Tepi?
Volume 1 of Coup Dtat in the Land of Zep Tepi: A Progress Report exposes for the first time how a legend from Central Africa explains the extremely violent obsession humans and their religions have with catastrophes, apocalypses, and the like. Be it said as well, the pages of this report, hastily typed by Buiteboer in the course of one very hot South African summer night, also sheds light on the question as to why the world did not come to an end on 21 December 2012, as apparently foretold by the Mayan calendar.
Did the Bachwezi have a hand in staying the course of the ticking time bomb hidden in the codes of the Mayan calendar? Will we meet RA and Quetzalcoatl at the other end of dawn?
Original price was: $3.99.$1.00Current price is: $1.00.
Access Coup D’État in the Land of Zep Tepi A Progress Report Now. Discount up to 90%
Full Title | Coup D’État in the Land of Zep Tepi A Progress Report |
---|---|
Author(s) | Buiteboer |
Edition | |
ISBN | 9781482875942, 9781482875980 |
Publisher | Partridge Publishing Africa |
Format | PDF and EPUB |
If you have ever wondered where the human obsession with the apocalypse comes from, if you ever wanted to know why the world did not come to an end on December 21, 2012, as prophesied by the Mayan calendar and propagated by paranoid apocalyptomaniacs, then Coup dtat in the Land of Zep Tepi: A Progress Report is for you. But why?
In an action-packed volume 1, the most controversial discovery to jump from the midst of mythological time into the twenty-first century exposes information concerning goings-on in ancient Egypt around 1450 BC. Volume 2 of Coup dtat in the Land of Zep Tepi: A Progress Report picks up narrative threads of the ongoing search for clues as to how and why the Bachwezi staged an outfiltration to off-worldly realms.
This edition of the report traces the outlines of even more shocking revelations unearthed, of all places, in Darfur. The search for a lost Story Hunter takes on new and increasingly surreal dimensions when one-legged angels start dropping in from the thin blue Darfuri desert sky.
Nevertheless, volume 2 forges ahead with Buiteboers original plan, which is to complete the report in the eye-span of one night. Immersed in hotly contested historical and geographical space, the completion of the hunt for Story Hunter jumps from Darfur to Khartoum in an unlikely night ride that takes the report into the thick of off-worldly goings-on and beyond the vertigo-filled zones occupied by the waghdas in volume 1.
Will Story Hunter be extracted back to earth from the off-worldly realms? Will Giovanni Neros search be met by success, or are they bound to disappear into the murky netherworlds, where pitched battles are being fought for control over territory in the fields of myth? In these pages, we will learn that the ancient gods of Egypt are reaching across space and vast regions of time to stay the hand of the ticking time bomb lodged in the Mayan calendars codes. Will the report come up with a plausible explanation for the world not coming to an end on December 21, 2012?