Subject: UFO BOOK LIST
Date: 1 Mar 94 01:30:51 GMT



                      The UFO bibliography

Barker, Gray.  They Knew Too Much About Flying Saucers. New York:
    University Books, 1956. 256pp. ISBN 56-7830


Barry, Bill.  Ultimate Encounter: The True Story of a UFO Kidnap-
    ping. New  York: Pocket Books, 1978. 205pp. ISBN 0-671-82079-
    6.  A reporter's book about the Travis Walton abduction.

Berlitz, Charles  and William L. Moore. The Roswell Incident. New
    York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1980. 168pp. ISBN 0-448-21199-8.  The
    facts about  the  supposed crash of a saucer in the summer of
    1947 in New Mexico and how the U.S. government covered it up.

Bowen, Charles,  ed. The Humanoids. Chicago: Henry Regnery, 1969.
    256pp. ISBN 77-126142.  Good summary of the evidence compiled
    from material   published  in the  British "Flying Saucer Re-
    view" magazine.

Cathie, Bruce  L. and  Peter N.  Temm. UFOs and Anti-Gravity. San
    Francisco: Strawberry  Hill Press/A  Walnut Hill  Book, 1971.
    201pp. ISBN  0-89407-011-8.   Wildly  speculative  book  that
    shows what UFOs do to some people.

Condon, Edward  U. and  Daniel S.  Gillmor (ed.). Final Report of
    the  Scientific   Study  of   Unidentified   Flying   Objects
    (Conducted by  the University  of Colorado  Under Contract to
    the United  States Air  Force). New York: Bantam Books, 1968.
    965pp.   Be sure  to actually  read some  of the  analyses of
    cases since about 30% are not identified despite adequate ev-
    idence.   Condon's debunking summary does not reflect the ac-
    tual contents  of the  half million dollar study.  Be sure to
    read Saunder's book along with this one.

Donovan, Roberta and Keith Wolverton. Mystery Stalks the Prairie.
    Raynesford, MT:  T.H.A.R. Institute, 1976. 108pp.  One of the
    few books  about   the cattle mutilations that some think are
    related to UFOs.

Druffel, Ann  and D. Scott Rogo. The Tujunga Canyon Contacts. En-
    glewood Cliffs,  NJ: Prentice-Hall,  1980. 264pp.  ISBN 0-13-
    932541-7   A description  of longterm,  multiple witness  UFO
    contacts in the Los Angeles area.

Eberhart, George  M.  UFOs and the Extraterrestrial Contact Move-
    ment: a   bibliography.  Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1986.
    1298pp.   ISBN 0-8108-  1919-8. Two  volumes: Volume  One  --
    Unidentified Flying  Objects,   Volume Two:  The Extraterres-
    trial Contact Movement.  An invaluable resource!

Evans, Hilary.  Visions, Apparitions, Alien Visitors. Wellingbor-
    ough, G.  B.: The  Aquarian Press, 1984. 318pp. ISBN 0-85030-
    414-8.   Good summary   of  the complexity of the UFO experi-
    ence.  This sets context.

Fawcett, Lawrence  and Barry J. Greenwood. Clear Intent: The Gov-
    ernment Coverup  of the  UFO  Experience.  Englewood  Cliffs,
    N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1984. 259pp. ISBN 0-13-136656-4.  One of
    the two books summarizing mostly FOIA-released UFO documents.
    See Tim  Good's book  for the  other.   There are  more  than
    10,000 pages  of FOIA docs about UFOs now in the hands of the
    public.

Fowler, Raymond  E. Casebook  of a  UFO Investigator:  A Personal
    Memoir. Englewood  Cliffs, NJ:  Prentice-Hall,  1981.  246pp.
    ISBN 0-13-117432-0.

Fowler, Raymond  E. The  Andreasson Affair,  Phase Two. Englewood
    Cliffs, NJ:  Prentice-Hall, 1982.  278pp. ISBN 0-13-036616-1.
    The second  book   about an extensive investigation of an ab-
    duction experience.

Fowler, Raymond  E. The  Andreasson Affair. Englewood Cliffs, NJ:
    Prentice-Hall, 1979.  239pp. ISBN  0-13-036608-0.   The first
    really detailed  examination of an abduction experience after
    the Barney and Betty Hill case.

Fowler, Raymond  E. UFOs: Interplanetary Visitors (A UFO Investi-
    gator Reports on the Facts, Fables, and Fantasies of the Fly-
    ing Saucers  Conspiracy). Englewood  Cliffs, N.J.:  Prentice-
    Hall, 1974.  365pp. ISBN  0-13-935569-3 pbk.   The  life of a
    topnotch investigator.

Fuller, Curtis G., ed. Proceedings of the First International UFO
    Congress. New York: Warner Books, 1980. 440pp.

Fuller, John  G. Aliens  in the Skies: The Scientific Rebuttal to
    the Condon  Committee Report.  New York:  G. P. Putnam, 1969.
    219pp.

Good, Timothy.  Above Top Secret: The Worldwide UFO Cover-Up. New
    York:  William Morrow, 1988. 592pp.  ISBN 0-688-07860-5.  The
    most important   book about the on-going government cover-up.
    See the Fawcett and Greenwood book on the same subject.

Haines, Richard  F. Observing  UFOs: An  Investigative  Handbook.
    Chicago: Nelson-Hall,  1980. 300pp.  ISBN 0-88229-540-3.    A
    scientific study  of mostly  night lights  and daylight discs
    categories of UFOs.

Haines, Richard  F., ed.  UFO Phenomena and the Behavioral Scien-
    tist. Metuchen,  N.J.: The Scarecrow Press, 1979. 450pp. ISBN
    0-8108-1228-2

Hall, Richard.   Uninvited  Guests: A  Documented History  of UFO
    Sightings,  Alien Encounters & Coverups. Santa Fe, NM: Aurora
    Press, 1988.  381pp.   ISBN   0-943358-32-9.  Best summary of
    the latest thinking about the UFO.

Heard, Gerald. The Riddle of the Flying Saucers: Is Another World
    Watching? London: Carroll & Nicholson, 1950. 157pp.




Hendry, Allan. The UFO Handbook: A Guide to Investigating, Evalu-
    ating, and  Reporting UFO Sightings. Garden City, NY: Double-
    day (Dolphin),  1979.   297pp. ISBN  0-385-14348-6.  The best
    study of the subject. About 1200 raw UFO reports, all happen-
    ing within  the year  and a half of the study's duration, are
    dissected.   8.8% fall  into the  genuine UFOs category; that
    is, flying saucers, whatever they are!

Hobana, Ion  and Julien  Weverbergh. UFOs  From Behind  the  Iron
    Curtain.  New York: Bantam, 1975. 305pp.

Hopkins, Budd.  Missing Time:  A Documented  Study of  UFO Abduc-
    tions. New  York: Richard  Marek, 1981.  258pp.  ISBN  0-399-
    90102-7.   Hopkin's first  book   about abductions.  Probably
    the foremost  investigator of  abductions, though   he's only
    been doing investigation for 15 years.

Hynek, J.  Allen. The  Hynek UFO  Report. New  York: Dell,  1977.
    297pp. ISBN  0-440-19201-3   Hynek, J. Allen. The UFO Experi-
    ence: A Scientific Inquiry. New York: Ballantine Books, 1972.
    309pp. ISBN  345-23953-9-150.   The father of  modern ufology
    writes a good book about the subject.

Jacobs, David  Michael. The UFO Controversy in America. Blooming-
    ton, IN:  Indiana University  Press, 1975. 362pp. ISBN 0-253-
    19006-1.  The only history of the subject so far.

Jung, Carl G. Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the
    Skies. New  York: New American Library (Signet), 1969. 144pp.
    ISBN 59-11766.   The   title  is somewhat of a misnomer since
    Jung believed  that UFOs  were   psychoid events -- part real
    and part paranormal.

Kagan, Daniel  and Ian  Summers. Mute  Evidence. New York: Bantam
    Books, 1983. 504pp. ISBN 0-522-23318-1.  Curious book debunk-
    ing the  animal   (mostly cattle) mutilations that went on in
    the late  60s, 1970s, and early  80s.  The authors don't seem
    to be connected with CSICOP.

Keel, John  A. The  Mothman Prophecies.  New York:  E. P.  Dutton
    (Saturday Review  Press), 1975.  269pp.  ISBN  0-8415-0355-9.
    Speculative book about mysterious goings on around saucers.

Keyhoe, Donald  E. Aliens from Space: The Real Story of Unidenti-
    fied Flying Objects. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1973. 322pp.
    The author's  last  book.  He played the same tune in all his
    books -- coverup, coverup, coverup.

Keyhoe, Donald  E. The  Flying Saucer Conspiracy. New York: Henry
    Holt, 1955.  315pp. LC  55-7918.   Thinking in the 1980s puts
    Keyhoe right  on the   money way back in the 1950s -- crashed
    saucers and  alien bodies  do exist   and  US intelligence is
    covering it up.




Klass, Philip  J. UFOs  -- Identified.  New York:  Random  House,
    1968. 290pp.  ISBN 67-22622.   Klass's  first book in which a
    reasonably honest effort is  made to offer an explanation for
    the stubborn 5 to 10% of all UFO sightings  that remain unex-
    plained.  Ball lightning is the explanation here.

Klass, Philip  J. UFOs  --  Explained.  New  York:  Random  House
    (Vintage Books), 1976. 438pp. ISBN 0-394-72106-3.  The author
    starts down the road of "it can't be, so it isn't".

Klass,  Philip   J.  UFOs:  The  Public  Deceived.  Buffalo,  NY:
    Prometheus Press,  1983. 310pp. ISBN 0-87975-201-4.  Debunker
    Klass tries  to protect  the innocent public from being taken
    in by  the errors of mainstream  ufologists.  Some ufologists
    now suspect  that Klass  may be working for U.S. intelligence
    since he  was editor  of Aviation  Week and  Space Technology
    magazine for years.

Klass, Philip  J.  UFO Abductions: A Dangerous Game. Buffalo, NY:
    Prometheus  Books, 1988. 200pp.  ISBN 0-87975-430-3.  Klass's
    latest attempt  to   dissuade people  from doing honest, open
    investigation of a confusing subject.

Lorenzen, Coral  E. The  Great Flying  Saucer Hoax: The UFO Facts
    and Their  Interpretation. New York: William-Frederick Press,
    1962. 257pp.  ISBN 62-10876.   One  of a  number of  detailed
    books about many cases.

Maney, Charles A. and Richard Hall. The Challenge of Unidentified
    Flying Objects.  Washington, D. C.: NICAP, 1961. 208pp.  Note
    Hall's book  above.   Some ufologists have spent more than 30
    years with  the subject.  Hall has  seen many changes in what
    mainstream ufologists  believe is  the truth about  UFOs over
    the years.

Mathes, J. H. and Lenora Huett. The Amnesia Factor. Millbrae, CA:
    Celestial Arts, 1975. 169pp. ISBN 0-89087-023-3

McCambell, James  M. UFOLOGY:  A Major Breakthrough in the Scien-
    tific Understanding of Unidentified Flying Objects. Millbrae,
    CA: Celestial  Arts, 1976.  184pp. ISBN  0-89087-144-2.  Just
    the facts, ma'am, approach to the phenomenology of UFOs.

Menzel, Donald  H. and Lyle G. Boyd. The World of Flying Saucers:
    A Scientific  Examination of  a Major  Myth of the Space Age.
    New York:  Doubleday, 1963. 302pp. ISBN   One of the author's
    three debunking  books   about UFOs.   Some  ufologists think
    Menzel, now deceased, was in the know  about saucers existing
    from 1947 on.

Menzel, Donald  H. Flying Saucers. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Univer-
    sity Press,  1953. 319pp.  ISBN 52-12419.   Menzel's earliest
    debunking book.   Note   imprint of the great Harvard U.  Who
    wouldn't believe this distinguished  astronomer's thoughts on
    the subject  in the gullible 50s?  Now, after Watergate, Con-
    tragate, the laughable Warren Commission report, etc., people
    are a bit more cautious about "official" pronouncements.

National Enquirer  UFO Report.  New  York:  Pocket  Books,  1985.
    221pp. ISBN  0-671-54250-8.   Rumor has  it that the tabloids
    National   Enquirer and World Weekly News have "accurate" UFO
    stories because  the  editor (the same guy) of these, in con-
    trast to all the other tabloids, used to work for the CIA.

Randles, Jenny  and Peter  Warrington. Science  and the UFOs. Ox-
    ford, U.K.: Basil Blackwell, 1985. 215pp. ISBN 0-631-13563-4.

Randles, Jenny.   The  UFO Conspiracy: The First Forty Years. New
    York:  Blanford Press, 1987. 224pp.  ISBN 0-7137-1972-9.  Yet
    another fine  book documenting  the growing coverup evidence.
    How many  do we have to have before the mainstream folks wake
    up?   There are  three now specifically about the UFO coverup
    situation.

Rasmussen, Richard  Michael. The  UFO Literature: A Comprehensive
    Annotated Bibliography  of Works  in English.  Jefferson, NC:
    McFarland & Company, 1985. 263pp. ISBN 0-89950-136-2.

Rimmer, John.  The Evidence for Alien Abductions. Wellingborough,
    G. B.:  The Aquarian  Press, 1984. 160pp. ISBN 0-85030-362-1.
    Good summary of the topic.

Sachs, Margaret.  The  UFO  Encyclopedia.  New  York:  Putnam  (A
    Perigee Book),  1980. 408pp.  ISBN 399-50454-0  pbk.   A good
    supplement to the encyclopedia by Story.

Sagan, Carl  and Thorton  Page, eds. UFOs -- A Scientific Debate.
    New York:  Norton, 1972. 310pp. ISBN 0-393-00739-1.  Appeared
    shortly after  the   Condon Committee  Report said once again
    that saucers  don't exist  so they   won't be studied by sci-
    ence.

Salisbury, Frank  B. The  Utah UFO Display: A Biologist's Report.
    Old Greenwich,  CN: Devin-Adair,  1974. 286pp.  ISBN  0-8159-
    7000-5

Saunders, David  R. and  R. Roger  Harkins. UFOs?  Yes! Where the
    Condon Committee  Went Wrong.  New York: New American Library
    (Signet), 1968.  256pp. ISBN  68-59202   Read this along with
    the Condon report.

Scully, Frank.  Behind the  Flying Saucers. New York: Henry Holt,
    1950. 230pp. The first book in English about UFOs.  Hollywood
    reporter talks   about  crashed discs  that have  only become
    plausible to mainstream investigators in the 1980s again.

Sheaffer, Robert.  The UFO  Verdict: Examining the Evidence. Buf-
    falo, NY:  Prometheus Books, 1981. 242pp. ISBN 0-87975-146-0.
    Card-carrying   member of  CSICOP dispenses with ALL the evi-
    dence even  though he's not  traveled to the site of a single
    one of the cases he discusses, well, maybe one or two, maybe.

Stanford, Ray. Socorro 'Saucer' in a Pentagon Pantry. Austin, TX:
    Blueapple Books,  1976. 211pp. ISBN 0-917092-00-7.  Interest-
    ing story  about "hard"  saucer evidence  getting lost in the
    halls of NASA.

Stevens, Wendelle  C.  UFO  ...  Contact  From  the  Pleiades:  A
    Preliminary Investigation  Report (The  Report of  an Ongoing
    Contact). Tucson,  AZ: Wendelle C. Stevens, 1982. 542pp. ISBN
    0-9608558-2-3.   The main  account of  a case that most MUFON
    investigators think  may be  a hoax. The case should probably
    not be  dismissed without  extensive investigation,  however,
    which MUFON has not done.

Story, Ronald  D. UFOs  and the  Limits  of  Science.  New  York:
    William Morrow,  1981. 290pp. ISBN 0-688-00144-0.  An attempt
    to get the scientific establishment to wake up.  Written by a
    converted skeptic.

Story, Ronald,  ed. The  Encyclopedia of  UFOs. Garden  City, NY:
    Doubleday (Dolphin  Books), 1980.  440pp. ISBN 0-385-11681-0.
    Not to be missed if you are serious about the subject.

Strieber, Whitley.  Communion: A  True Story.  New York:  William
    Morrow,   1987. 299pp.   ISBN 0-688-07086-8.  This book spent
    seven weeks  at No. 1 on the New York Times bestsellers list.
    The author was a bestselling horror and environmental fiction
    author before this "fact" book.  Should you believe him?  Get
    a good grounding in the literature and then read Strieber and
    decide.

Strieber, Whitley.  Majestic.   New York:   G.P.  Putnam's  Sons,
    1989. 317pp.   ISBN 0-399-13469-7.  This is quite a departure
    from Strieber's  other works of UFO literature.  Presented as
    a fictional  account of  the activities  that came  after the
    1947 Roswell, New Mexico, disk crash, this book contains many
    hints that it is supposed to be mostly true.  The book is in-
    terspersed with  supposed government  documents  that  Milton
    Cooper says are actually in the Project Grudge files.

Strieber, Whitley.  Transformation: The  Breakthrough. New  York:
    William   Morrow, 1988. 256pp.  ISBN 0-688-07700-5.  The fol-
    low-up book to his best-selling Communion.

Stringfield, Leonard  H. Situation  Red: The UFO Siege! New York:
    Fawcett-Crest Books,  1977. 254pp.  ISBN 0-449-23654-4.   The
    author's   tribulations as  a UFO  investigator -- government
    coverup information included.

Vallee, Jacques.  Dimensions: A  Casebook of  Alien Contact.  New
    York:   Contemporary Books, 1988. 304pp.  ISBN 0-8092-4586-8.
    The latest and  best statement of Vallee's thesis -- UFOs are
    a manifestation of a time immemorial alien control system.

Vallee, Jacques. Anatomy of a Phenomenon: Unidentified Objects in
    Space --  A Scientific Appraisal. New York: Ballantine Books,
    1974. 227pp.  ISBN 345-24287-4-150.  Straightforward descrip-
    tion of the phenomenon as it was understood 15 years ago.

Vallee, Jacques.  Passport to  Magonia: From  Folklore to  Flying
    Saucers. Chicago:  Henry Regnery,  1969. 372pp.  ISBN 0-8092-
    8330-1.   A study  of the  surprising parallels between fairy
    lore and modern accounts of UFO beings.

Vallee, Jacques.  The Invisible  College: What  a Group of Scien-
    tists Has  Discovered About UFO Influences on the Human Race.
    New York: E. P. Dutton, 1975. 216pp. ISBN 0-525-13470-0

Walton, Travis. The Walton Experience. New York: Berkley Publish-
    ing, 1978. 181pp. ISBN 425-03675-8.  A detailed account of an
    abduction that  lasted  for days instead of the usual hour or
    two.

Williamson, George  Hunt. The Saucers Speak: A Documentary Report
    of Interstellar  Communication  by  Radiotelegraphy.  London:
    Neville Spearman, 1963. 160pp.

