Earth 101: The Hidden Planet

by Steven Fazekas


Formats

Softcover
$13.99
E-Book
$3.99
Softcover
$13.99

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 10/20/2017

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 210
ISBN : 9781546207528
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 210
ISBN : 9781546207511

About the Book

Humans have been intrigued with the sky and what lies beyond since the beginning of time. They looked at the moon, the stars and the planets while they wished to unlock their secrets. An unexplainable yearning, a strange homesickness guided their attempt, a subconscious one that always suggested that humans may have originated from another celestial object. In other words, earth may have been a stop gap for them, perhaps a temporary stay-over. Humans have always been amazed by the creatures of this planet: birds, fish, mammals, worms, amphibians, insects . . . how easily they all fit into their natural environment. Humans, on the other hand, are restless and battle endlessly and struggle with earth’s environment. In our yearning to belong to a “natural environment,” we humans had created an idolized and mystified place that we described in the Bible as the Garden of Eden. What if this place actually existed? This book suggests that human’s original home, human’s natural environment, does exist—not in tales or legends but somewhere out in our planetary system. Read this book and you may agree that it makes sense. You might even conclude that this concept is not (so) far-fetched. Earth 101: The Hidden Planet explores mankind’s ability to extend its domain and attempt to shed its earthly handicaps.


About the Author

Steven Fazekas immigrated in the United States of America on 1986. Prior to coming to America, he already lived as an immigrant in Italy, Britain and South Africa. They each had good and bad to offer, but generally they all have his thanks and compliments. Nevertheless, America is the only country that made him feel at home right from the start, perhaps because in here, everyone else is an immigrant. Most came long before he had arrived, but none have more rights or duties than him.