Ancient Gods: Were They Real? by Melissa Saulnier
What if the gods of antiquity were more than myth?
In Ancient Gods: Were They Real?, author and independent researcher Melissa Saulnier embarks on a sweeping cross-cultural investigation into one of history's most provocative questions: did the divine beings worshipped by our ancient ancestors actually exist? Drawing on decades of study and an extraordinary range of primary sources - from the Hebrew scriptures and the Book of Enoch to the Sumerian King Lists, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and the mythologies of Greece, Mesopotamia, and beyond - Saulnier builds a compelling case that the world's ancient traditions may share something far deeper than coincidence.
Part scholarly synthesis, part speculative exploration, this book examines the recurring figures and themes that surface across unconnected civilizations: the divine council, the Watchers and their forbidden knowledge, the Nephilim and the Titans, the great Flood, the Garden of Eden, and the enigmatic megalithic builders. Are these parallel narratives the product of independent imagination - or echoes of a shared collective memory?
Saulnier approaches these questions with intellectual honesty and an open mind, weighing the biblical record alongside ancient Near Eastern texts, astronomical data, and the work of scholars such as Michael S. Heiser. She explores the Gap Theory and its implications, the cosmological significance of the precession of the equinoxes, the legends of giants across cultures, the mysteries of Atlantis and Babel, and the stunning detail preserved in the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Ancient Gods: Were They Real? is not a book that demands you arrive at any particular conclusion. It is an invitation - to question, to investigate, and to consider that the ancient world may have known things we are only beginning to rediscover.
For readers of alternative history, biblical archaeology, ancient mythology, and speculative theology, this is essential reading.