
“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!”
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