Book Review: Contactees: A History of Alien-Human Interaction
“I AM DIANE… I COME FROM VENUS.”
Thus were the words of “Diane,” a eight-foot tall alien being “Standing like a sylph-like goddess” after manifesting before Dana Howard, a woman famous for her communications with what she believed to be alien visitors from Venus in the 1950s. Howard’s claims certainly represent a fringe element in the history of Ufology, some spectral aspect that can be attributed to the extraterrestrial mystery. As obscure as her story remains in the present day, there is one collaborative aspect to all this that cannot be ignored: she was not alone.
With his book Contactees: A History of Alien-Human Interaction, Nick Redfern has placed himself at the pinnacle of what may be the strangest aspect of modern Ufology. Indeed, many like Howard–famous and flamboyant individuals throughout history–have claimed to possess knowledge of beings from other worlds; although the greatest concentration of contact with “aliens” maintains an epicenter that comprises the last sixty years. This historic period is the focus of Redfern’s book, which the author presents for us in the most well-researched and informative presentation available.
The contactee element is so strange, and in many ways distinguishable from all other aspects of the UFO experience. For instance, many contactees claim to have met and interacted with extraterrestrial intelligences without falling victim to popular (and often sensationalized) abduction reports that have become so common. Take George Adamski, “The Ultimate Contactee” (to whom Redfern devotes an entire chapter in his book). Adamski, if his claims of travel to distant planets like Venus are to be believed, seemed to have been a willing recipient. “Someone take me down the road quick,” Redfern writes, quoting the famous contactee. “That ship has come looking for me and I don’t want to keep them waiting!”
Or consider the backwoods exploits of Ralph Lael, who upon entering caves in the Black Mountains of Western North Carolina began a strange series of communications with aliens from the planet Peewam (fortune smiled upon Lael in the truest sense, as his alien captors closely resembled scantily clad ladies in bikinis).
In addition to providing brilliant, informative first-hand research, Contactees also highlights the work of a variety of other individuals who have staked claims in the field of Ufology and alien encounters. Greg Bishop, Timothy Green Beckley, Joshua P. Warren, Jim Mosley, Regan Lee, are all interviewed within its pages, providing what may be the most diverse argument pertaining to human-alien interaction throughout the ages that has ever been produced. Perhaps, though sadly, one of the book’s brightest points of interest involves the discussion of cryptoterrestrials, a sort of last will and testament given by the late (and sorely missed) researcher Mac Tonnies. The inclusion of Tonnies’ futuristic interpretations provide icing on the cake to what otherwise would still be by far the best—albeit the strangest—book on UFO contactees to-date.
Indeed, Contactees outlines a peculiar subculture that remains present in the fringes of Americana, and though well known to some, it has received its best treatment thanks to the efforts of Redfern. With the information provided in this book, one may even begin to interpret the manner and appearances of UFO craft throughout the decades… perhaps the next move of the trans-generational “Space Brothers” lies within its very words.
Click here to buy Contactees: A History of Alien-Human Interaction
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Alan Greenfield had an unusual take on all the High Strangeness (particularly linguistically) in contactee reports. Although I do not necessarily agree with his interpretation (I am a fan of gematria as a psychological device, not as a device for cryptography), it is certainly worth looking at for anyone interested in contactee experiences.
These were outlined in the amusingly named “Secret Cypher of the UFONauts” and “Occult Rituals of the Men In Black”.
The tl;dr version? During the height of the contactee period, the strange words and names said by the UTs were meant to be decrypted using the thelemite ALW cypher by the secret chiefs/illuminati, and disseminated via mass media reports.
Comment by ENKI-][ — December 21, 2009 @ 12:38 pm
I’m looking forward to reading this latest one from Redfern. Looks like he’s written a long-overdue, in-depth look at the “contactee” phenomenon.
Thanks for the synopsis.
Comment by wmmott — December 21, 2009 @ 3:25 pm
Indeed Mike, you’ll enjoy the heck out of this one. Also, rather than being from Venus, it’s a good thing “Diane” didn’t say, “… I come from Hell!” Yikes! Don’t know exactly where I’m going with that one…
ENKI… UFOnauts is a favorite expression of mine. Who coined that term, was it Greenfield? I recall there being a book written in the mid seventies, a mass market paperback, that incorporated the title, though I had mentally attributed it to Hans Holzer or someone who wasn’t normally associated with Ufology. I’m drawing a blank as to the exact identity of the author.
-Micah
Comment by Micah — December 21, 2009 @ 4:36 pm
Probably that during that period of general cultural optimism, for some people it was only natural that if were visited from some other place, those beings would necessarily have to be benevolent and more spiritually advanced than us.
And interestingly, their spiritual superiority also translated in external physical beauty, an idea that’s very old —among the ancient Hebrews disease and deformity was the result of sin, whether the parents’ or one’s own.
But eventually the notion that these beings might not be so benevolent began to creep into the UFO culture; maybe as a result of the pessimism of the late 60s and 70s —”if these angelic beings are here, why won’t they stop the Vietnam war?”
That’s some of the things I was thinking when I went to visit Pandora thanks to James Cameron’s invitation. The idea that humans would be able to master inter-solar travel BEFORE sorting a way to heal the wounds of our planet was kind of depressing —but very plausible, since an urge to find another source of exploitable commodities might have a greater impact in space engineering R&D in the years to come.
Comment by red pill junkie — December 22, 2009 @ 12:00 pm