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- 10-Aug-87 19:47 MST
- Sb: AP 08/07 0818 Abductions
-
- ------ By STEFAN FATSIS Associated Press Writer
- NEW YORK (AP) -- What angers Whitley Strieber most is the attitude of UFO
- debunkers who outright reject his claims in the best-selling book "Communion"
- that he was abducted by short, stocky, big-eyed humanoids.
- Strieber, the 42-year-old author of pop thrillers-turned-movies "The Wolfen"
- and "The Hunger," resolutely denies inventing his 299-page account of bright
- lights and midnight visits by alien beings to his remote cabin in upstate New
- York.
- "I believe I am telling the truth," Strieber said in a telephone interview.
- "`Communion' never demands that you believe in UFOs or that you believe that the
- visitors are physically real.
- "All it asks you to do is place into question some of the paradigms about
- reality and the nature of the mind," he said. "I'm not asking more than that."
- "Communion," which has sold more than 250,000 copies and was No. 1 on the New
- York Times non-fiction best-seller list for three weeks, details Strieber's
- reported contacts with alien visitors in 1985-86.
- In the book, Strieber says on one occasion humanoids wearing gray body-suits
- carried him to a small depression in the woods and later to a messy chamber. The
- visitors, he says, physically assaulted him, inserting a "shiny, hair-thin
- needle" in his head and a long, scaly object in his rectum.
- "It wasn't dreamlike in any way -- you don't get a needle mark in your head
- from a dream," Strieber said. "I felt like I was being raped. ... It just didn't
- strike me as being hallucinatory or dreamlike in nature."
- Co-author of two books about nuclear war and the environment, "Warday" and
- "Nature's End," Strieber said he has received more than 2,000 letters from
- readers, over half of whom claim some kind of alien contact.
- He is forming a referral service network of doctors and counselors -- not UFO
- investigators -- for people who have written to him claiming paranormal
- experiences.
- "People know that something is going on and it's not understood by science,"
- Strieber said. "The result of this is they're just simply not going to buy the
- debunkers. They shouldn't believe them. The real problem we have now is that the
- debunkers are frightening the scientific community into not taking a
- clear-headed look at this.
- "`Communion' has been done with a lot of care and a lot of attention to
- candor," he added. "There's no reason that someone with a good reputation can't
- take it seriously and study it seriously."
- Many details of Strieber's alleged encounters emerged during hypnosis
- sessions with a New York City psychiatrist, transcripts of which are included in
- the book.
- Strieber says he underwent a battery of physical and psychological tests that
- showed him to be normal, and also passed two polygraphs. The bottom of each page
- of "Communion" asserts that Strieber's is "A True Story."
- "I believe it so completely that I can take a lie detector test and pass," he
- said. "I cannot be convinced -- not by myself, not by a psychiatrist, not by
- anybody -- that there is the slightest doubt this is real."
- Strieber, who includes his wife and 8-year-old son among witnesses to the
- paranormal happenings, is writing a sequel entitled "Transformation" about
- subsequent visits.
- The author received a $1 million advance from the publisher for "Communion"
- but said negotiations haven't been completed for the new book, which details his
- struggle to come to terms with being the apparent subject of alien experiments.
- "Transformation" includes one "major" encounter and three minor ones with the
- same humanoids, Strieber said. The sequel is about his transformation"from a
- frightened victim to someone who is going to tell it like it was, damn the
- consequences."
- He said he no longer fears when he will be "visited" again.
- "I just live my life," Strieber said. "When these happen it's always a little
- startling. But I don't think in terms of when it will happen again."
- The author said he had no interest in UFOs until his first encounters.
- "It just didn't seem to matter very much," he said. "My concerns were peace
- and the environment."
- "When I was 11 or 12 there were (outer space) movies ... but it wasn't
- something that we thought was particularly real. It was science fiction, but you
- don't expect science fiction to be real."
- ------
- ("Communion" is published by William Morrow.)
-
-
- Copyright 1987 by the Associated Press. All rights reserved.