| Author/Contributor(s): | Whiteman, Yvonne; Hancock, Graham |
| Publisher: | Bear & Company |
| Date: | 5/11/2027 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Condition: | NEW |
• Draws on archaeology, genetics, linguistics, and comparative mythology to explore the Kolbrin books, focusing on their astonishing story of the Fall of Man
• Reveals the Kolbrin’s account of three original co-existing species: the Grand Company or Annunaki, the Children of God, and the Yoslings
• Connects the Kolbrin’s Egyptian Sacred Records to the Book of Genesis, the Sumerian Enuma Elis and Atrahasis, and the Books of Enoch to identify the roots of our shortened lifespan
The Kolbrin claims to be a collection of ancient Egyptian and Celtic books with an early account of human origins that differs surprisingly from the story told in the Book of Genesis.
Yvonne Whiteman has studied the Kolbrin for over a decade. Cross-referencing its Egyptian Books with archaeology, genetics, linguistics, and comparative mythology, she reveals their significance and core authenticity. The Kolbrin describes three species that once shared the Earth: an advanced extraterrestrial group called the Grand Company or Annunaki; the Children of God, their engineered servant creation; and the Yoslings, a primitive hominid species. When a Daughter of God mated with a Yosling in ‘the Gardenplace’—the Kolbrin’s Garden of Eden—the resulting genetic devastation shortened the human lifespan, introduced disease, and severed humanity’s connection to higher consciousness.
Whiteman investigates how the Kolbrin aligns not only with Atrahasis, Enuma Elis, and the Books of Enoch, but also with modern-day excavations and DNA finds. She locates the Kolbrin’s Gardenplace in the Indus Valley before it became a desert, places the Sons of God in the Armenian highlands, and shows how the Kolbrin’s distinctive version of the Gilgamesh epic marks the end of genetic chaos.
The Fall of the Sons of God is a startling and evocative account that links Kolbrin records with origin myths from the great world civilizations, telling who we are and where we come from.