jueves, 16 de julio de 2026

Passport to Magonia, by Jacques Vallée (2014)

The Country Where Fairies Arrive in Flying Saucers

Some books age badly because they were wrong, and some books age strangely because they were right about the wrong question. *Passport to Magonia* (1969), by the French astronomer and ufologist Jacques Vallée, belongs to this second, more uncomfortable category. It did not prove that extraterrestrials exist. Nor did it prove that fairies exist. What it did prove, with an erudition that still startles, is that the narrative machinery through which human beings process the inexplicable has barely changed in a thousand years — and that perhaps we should worry less about the content of our visions and more about their insistently repeated form.

The book's central argument, in its simplest formulation, is almost a provocation for the dinner table: modern accounts of UFO encounters — lights in the sky, small beings descending from a craft, missing time, veiled warnings about humanity's fate — share a strikingly identical architecture with medieval and Renaissance legends of fairies, goblins, "little people," and the aerial kingdom of Magonia that Carolingian peasants spoke of, and that a bishop, Agobard of Lyon, was already mocking in the ninth century. Vallée does not merely point out the parallel as a folkloric curiosity; he turns it into the engine of a hypothesis uncomfortable for both sides of the ufological debate: if the phenomenon were simply craft from another planet, why does it behave, generation after generation, exactly as the spirits of the forest once behaved?

It is worth saying immediately what this book is not. It is not a work of skepticism in the sense Carl Sagan or Philip Klass understood the word: Vallée has no interest in explaining sightings away as misidentified weather balloons, and in fact devotes considerable pages to dismissing that reductive reading as insufficient. Nor, however, is it a believer's tract in the mold of 1950s contactee ufology, with its Venusian messiahs and messages of cosmic peace. Vallée, who worked as an astronomer and would later advise American intelligence projects on unidentified aerial phenomena, writes from a third position, more unsettling than either of the other two: that the phenomenon is real as a recurring experience, but that its explanation is probably neither "it's an airplane" nor "they're Martians" — but something for which our twentieth-century conceptual vocabulary, neatly divided between science and superstition, simply lacks the tools to name.

The book's structure mirrors this hybrid ambition, and, it must be said, at times turns it into a strange reading object. The first half builds the comparative scaffolding: chapters that dismantle, one by one, the tropes of the ufological encounter — the abduction, the moral warning, time that stops or accelerates, the small luminous beings, the witness's inability to speak afterward — and find them near-exact twins in Robert Kirk's *Secret Commonwealth*, in chronicles of fairy abductions collected across Scotland and Ireland, in Celtic mythology, and even in certain Mayan and Japanese traditions that Vallée brings in with a breadth that occasionally verges on accumulation for its own sake. This is where the book is most persuasive and also most vulnerable: the folkloric comparison is genuinely illuminating, but the attentive reader will notice that Vallée rarely pauses to ask whether structural similarity between two kinds of story proves a shared underlying cause or, more modestly, something about how the human imagination — with no help beyond its own grammar — tends to manufacture visitors from elsewhere whenever it needs to explain the inexplicable. The book assumes the former when the material, rigorously, only warrants the latter.

The second half changes register almost entirely, and this is where *Passport to Magonia* becomes, quite literally, an archive: roughly one hundred fifty pages of a chronological catalogue of UFO landings and encounters, year by year, from the mid-nineteenth century through 1968, followed by listings of press references and specialized publications of the period. It is an almost obsessive gesture of documentary accumulation — Vallée himself would later acknowledge, in the preface he added to the 1990s edition, how arduous it was to gather thousands of testimonies without the databases we now take for granted — and it functions, depending on how one looks at it, as either the book's greatest strength or its heaviest ballast. As a strength, because no one can accuse Vallée of building his theory on stray anecdotes: here is the raw material, laid out with relatively little interpretive filtering, inviting verification. As ballast, because a list of a thousand cases without a clear critical hierarchy ends up resembling noise more than evidence, and the reader who came looking for an argument suddenly finds himself leafing through a compendium.

Where the book does reach genuine intellectual altitude is in its final chapter, "Nurslings of Immortality," and particularly in its closing sections, where Vallée abandons cataloguing mode and allows himself to speculate with a candor rare in the ufological literature of his time. There he proposes something that anticipates, by decades, discussions now familiar from philosophy of mind and belief studies: that perhaps the UFO phenomenon — like the fairy phenomenon before it — is not a fact about the external world awaiting verification, but a cultural mechanism with a function of its own, something he calls, in a memorable phrase, "the functioning lie": a belief system that perpetuates itself precisely because it is literally false and operatively true, because it performs a psychological and social task that neither science nor official religion fully manages to perform. It is an idea that brushes against social constructivism without quite surrendering to it, and one Vallée never fully develops with the rigor it deserves — perhaps because he senses, correctly, that following it to its logical end would render irrelevant much of the catalogue he has just spent one hundred fifty pages assembling.

That, it seems to me, is the unresolved tension defining this book, and it explains both its enduring influence and its evident limitations. Vallée wants, simultaneously, to treat sightings as an objective phenomenon amenable to scientific cataloguing and to suggest that the right question is not "what are they, objectively?" but "what function do they serve in the human psyche, and why does that function always choose the same narrative shape?" These are two different projects, and the book never fully decides which one it belongs to. A reader arriving expecting ufology will find too much epistemological speculation; a reader arriving expecting philosophy of belief will find too much catalogue. And yet it is precisely that generic discomfort that has kept the book cited more than half a century later, long after nearly all the contactee literature of its era fell into well-deserved obscurity.

It is worth situating the book in its moment. Published at the height of the American counterculture, a year before Erich von Däniken popularized the "ancient astronauts" hypothesis in its cruder, more commercially successful form with *Chariots of the Gods?*, *Passport to Magonia* stands as almost the intellectual reverse of that publishing phenomenon: where von Däniken flattened human history to fit a narrative of spacefaring visitors, Vallée complicated the contemporary UFO phenomenon to the point of near-unrecognizability, dissolving it into a millennia-old tradition of encounters with the other that no simple extraterrestrial hypothesis could fully explain. It is no surprise that Vallée is said to have been one of the inspirations for the French investigator character in Spielberg's *Close Encounters of the Third Kind*: there is, in his prose, the same mixture of scientific rigor and genuinely humanist wonder that Truffaut brought to the screen.

Nearly sixty years after its publication, what endures of *Passport to Magonia* is not its catalogue of landings — today an almost archaeological document of a pre-internet age when compiling a thousand testimonies was a feat of archival labor — but its uncomfortable question, posed before almost anyone else asked it: why do the visions change costume from century to century but never change script? Vallée did not resolve that question, and it is doubtful any book could. But he had the intellectual honesty, uncommon then and now, to refuse pretending that the easy answer — whether the skeptic's or the believer's — was enough. In an age saturated with instant certainties about phenomena that deserve none, that deliberate discomfort remains, oddly, the most valuable thing the book has to offer.

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Passport to Magonia, by Jacques Vallée (2014)

The Country Where Fairies Arrive in Flying Saucers Some books age badly because they were wrong, and some books age strangely because they...