Issue 10

ISSUE 10

10

Summer is here and, just like the Heretic Magazine Issue 10, it is hot, steamy and something you have no doubt eagerly awaited for weeks. As you delve into our latest assortment of heretical holiday companions, remember that we call our magazine the Heretic because heresy is how we keep our sanity in a world where media and puppet masters create the agenda and manipulate the masses. Heresy is how we fight back. Heresy is good.

Our latest issue contains nine sensational new articles and, in keeping with our commitment to bring you new voices from a variety of disciplines, four of these are by first-time contributors to the magazine, written by a variety of cross-disciplinary experts and subject-area enthusiasts in the fields of alternative history, lost civilisations and technologies, mysteries and conundrums, Rennes-le-Château, the occult, politics, science and more. No magazine offers more specialised content of this sort than the Heretic.

Edited and collated by Andrew Gough, designed by the amazing Mark Foster and sub-edited by wordsmith Beth Johnson, Issue 10 features (alphabetically) Scarlett Amaris, Jeanne D’Août,  Andrew Gough, Robin Melrose, Madlen Namro, Jeff Nisbet, Matthew Petti, John Phillpott and Katrina Sisowath.

LIST OF CONTENTS

In On the Trail of the Tetramorph, Heretic Magazine regular Scarlett Amaris lifts the veil on a remarkable Spanish painter whose style often bordered on the macabre. And why not? For he appears to have been influenced by the master alchemist, Fulcanelli. But were there hidden meanings, perhaps concealed messages, in his work? Amaris investigates.

Jeanne D’Août makes her Heretic Magazine debut with an epic piece that she calls, The Sacred Stones of the Sabarthès: A look behind the veil of Otto Rahn’s Grail quest. It will be clear from the onset that work like this is really only possible if one is immersed in both the region and subject matter, and D’Août has lived in Cathar country for a very long time.

You’ve seen the musical, now feast on the facts. In From Mesopotamia to Mesoamerica; Hunting for History in the Book of Mormon Andrew Gough combs the pages of the controversial Latter-Day Saint text in search of irrefutable proof that the peculiar tale actually does chronicle elements of real history. What he has uncovered may surprise you.

Author Robin Melrose is one of those researchers who has an eye for important things that others have overlooked. In his debut article, The Prehistoric Druids Never Went Away – They Just Built Churches, Melrose takes us on a journey of discovery from prehistory to the present that will leave you wondering why you have not been taken there before.

Heretic regular Madlen Namro returns with a sizzling investigation into Top-Secret Alien Bases. What if the presence of extra-terrestrial beings inhabiting bases built deep underground was real? What if it was being concealed by our governments? Namro, an expert in the field of extra-terrestrial contact, explores, and what she has uncovered is unsettling, indeed.

They say one should write about things they know, or which are dear to them. In The Mystery of Calcot Park Jeff Nisbet does both, while revealing a shocking twist to a vital part of European history, as well as his family’s history. Nisbet writes: ‘By day’s end, all along the approximately eighteen-mile line of battle, a staggering 19,240 British soldiers lay dead out of 57,470 total recorded casualties — still the bloodiest single day of combat in UK military history. Lance Corporal Jimmie Nisbet was one of them. His younger brother, William Nisbet of the Cameron Highlanders, was my grandfather. He survived the battle and the rest of the war, which is the reason I am here today to tell this tale.’

In The Significance of Atlantis: Altering our Precepts to Shape our Destiny author Matthew Petti asks the question: ‘Why is it so hard to see that the earliest and most indelible memory of human existence on earth is consistently and uniformly telling us that we are the offshoot of a previous civilization?’ Petti’s fresh approach to an ancient enigma raises as many questions as it answers.

Historian John Phillpott visits the land of John Wycliffe and traces the story of the man who would sow the seeds of the English Reformation. In The Land of Wycliffe Phillpott proclaims: ‘This is the story of a fourteenth-century cleric who changed the face of Christianity forever.’ A true heretic, indeed.

The wonderful and always provocative Katrina Sisowath returns with a fascinating piece that she calls The Tale of Medusa. What if all you knew about the legendary Medusa was only half the story?

BUY NOW

Issue 10