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Whitley Strieber

 
Who2 Biography: Whitley Strieber, Writer/Alien Abductee
Whitley Strieber
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  • Born: 13 June 1945
  • Birthplace: San Antonio, Texas
  • Best Known As: The alien-abductee novelist who wrote Communion

A former ad man, Whitley Strieber was a writer of horror novels, notably The Hunger and Wolfen, both of which were made into movies in the 1980s. In 1985 Strieber's Communion, a non-fiction account of his abduction by extra-terrestrials became a best-seller, and his career took an expected turn: he became a UFO expert. Since then Strieber has written several books about his own continuing experiences with aliens, as well as collaborating with radio host Art Bell on a book, The Coming Global Superstorm, and on Bell's radio show, Dreamland.

Strieber's autobiographical Communion was also made into a movie, starring Christopher Walken.

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(1945-)

Best-selling author of fantasy and horror stories, several of which, including Wolfen and The Hunger, have been adapted as successful movies. In 1987 he completed a nonfiction book, Communion, in which he relates his personal experiences in encounters with what he believes to be extraterrestrials. The encounters included an abduction and examination by strange creatures in a flying craft. The response led to two follow-up books on the same theme: Transformation: The Breakthrough (1988) and a novel, Majestic (1989). All three made the bestseller lists.

Strieber was born on June 13, 1945, in San Antonio, Texas. He was educated at the University of Texas (B.A., 1968) and the London School of Economics and Political Science (certificate, 1968). From 1970 through 1977 he wrote novels while working at an advertising company, becoming account supervisor and vice president.

The idea for his novel The Wolfen (1978), later made into a successful movie, is said to have arisen from the experience of encountering a pack of feral dogs while walking through Central Park in New York. His other publications include Black Magic (1982), The Night Church (1983), Wolf of Shadows (1986) (with James W. Kunetka), and The Consequences of the TwentiethCentury (1986). His novel The Hunger (1981), notable for the very different twist it gave to the vampire myth, was made into a movie in 1983. Strieber has also designed games based on various periods of history, including a game about the late Middle Ages entitled "1480: Age of Exploration" and one covering computer games. He has participated in archaeological projects in Central America and has been involved with a scientific group attempting to authenticate the Turin shroud.

Soon after the publication of Communion, Strieber received more than five hundred letters, many claiming similar experiences of contact by extraterrestrials or other creatures. His experience was further publicized in an article in the International UFO Reporter (January/February 1987), in which Strieber characterizes such reports as "visitor experiences."

Strieber eventually came to the conclusion that, in spite of the intrusive nature of the initial abduction experience, the extraterrestrials were a benevolent group. In 1989 he founded the Communion Foundation to assist in establishing a productive relationship with the space beings. Professional psychologists working for the foundation began to catalog similar reports in a database and follow-up studies involving mental and physical tests with selected volunteers were planned.

Strieber immediately ran into conflict with the ufological community, which draws a sharp distinction between the more negative abduction reports and the more positive claims of encounters with flying saucers, which are classified as contactee accounts. Strieber's account began to sound more and more like a contactee story of the type that had been written off as either fraudulent or religious hyperbole. In 1991 he closed the Communion Foundation and returned to fiction writing. He reportedly is still interested in the field, however, and has continued having encounters with extraterrestrials.

Sources:

Clark, Jerome. UFOs in the 1980s. Vol. 1 of The UFO Encyclopedia. Detroit: Apogee Books, 1990.

Conroy, Ed. Report on "Communion:" An Independent Investigation of and Commentary on Whitley Strieber's "Communion." New York: William Morrow, 1989.

Strieber, Whitley. Communion: A True Story. New York: William Morrow, 1987.

——. Majestic. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1989.

——. Transformation: The Breakthrough. New York: William Morrow, 1988.

Wikipedia: Whitley Strieber
Top
Whitley Strieber
Born Louis Whitley Strieber
June 13, 1945 (1945-06-13) (age 64)
San Antonio, Texas, U.S.
Occupation Writer/Novelist
Nationality American
Writing period 1978–present
Genres Horror novels
Notable work(s) The Wolfen (1978)
The Hunger (1981)

Louis Whitley Strieber (pronounced /ˈstriːbər/; born June 13, 1945) is an American writer best known for his horror novels The Wolfen and The Hunger and for Communion, a non-fiction account of his perceived experiences with non-human entities. Strieber also co-authored The Coming Global Superstorm with Art Bell, which inspired the blockbuster film about sudden climate change, The Day After Tomorrow.

Contents

Early life

Strieber was born in San Antonio, Texas, the son of Karl Strieber, a lawyer and Mary Drought Strieber. He attended Central Catholic Marianist High School in San Antonio, Texas. He was educated at the University of Texas at Austin and the London School of Film Technique, graduating from each in 1968. He then worked for several advertising firms in New York City, rising to the level of vice president before quitting in 1977.

Fiction

Strieber began his career as a novelist with the horror novels The Wolfen (1978) and The Hunger (1981), each of which was later made into a movie, followed by the less successful horror novels Black Magic (1982) and The Night Church (1983).

Strieber then turned to speculative fiction. He wrote Warday (1984), about the dangers of limited nuclear warfare, and Nature's End (1986), a novel about environmental apocalypse, collaboratively with James Kunetka. He is also the author of Wolf of Shadows (1985), a young adult novel set in the aftermath of a nuclear war.

In 1986, Strieber's fantasy novel Catmagic was published, co-authored with Jonathan Barry, who was billed as an aerospace industry consultant and a practicing witch. In the 1987 paperback edition, Strieber states that Jonathan Barry is fictitious and that he is the author of Catmagic. Strieber's personal publishing company, Walker & Collier, is named after two characters in Catmagic.

Later, less successful thrillers by Strieber (all now out of print) include Billy (1990), The Wild (1991), Unholy Fire (1992) and The Forbidden Zone (1993).

He later returned to the vampire saga that began with The Hunger, adding The Last Vampire (2001) and Lilith's Dream (2002) to the story.

His novel of alien abduction The Grays (2006) makes use of his experiences of the phenomenon.

The author's short stories were collected in the 1997 limited edition volume Evenings with Demons. An unlimited edition was planned for 2007.

Communion and "The Visitors"

On December 26, 1985, Strieber reportedly had an experience in which he believed he was abducted from his cabin in upstate New York by non-human beings. He wrote about these experiences in his first non-fiction book, Communion (1987). The book is generally interpreted as a claim of alien abduction but Strieber says that he draws no conclusions about the nature of his experience. He refers to the beings as "the visitors," a name chosen to be as neutral as possible and leaves open the possibility that they are not extraterrestrials and that they exist in his mind. He has repeatedly expressed his frustration with what he feels are fantastic claims incorrectly attributed to him.

Strieber went on to write three more autobiographical books about his experiences with the visitors, Transformation (1988), Breakthrough (1995) and The Secret School (1996).

Other visitor-themed books of Strieber's include Majestic (1989), a novel about the Roswell UFO incident and The Communion Letters (1997, reissued in 2003), a collection of letters from readers reporting experiences similar to Strieber's. Confirmation (1998), despite its title does not propose that there has been 'confirmation' of UFOs or abductions. It analyses the evidence and discusses what more would be required to provide 'confirmation'. A 2006 novel, The Grays, presented his impression of alien contact through a fictional narrative.

Strieber wrote the screenplay for the 1989 film Communion, directed by Philippe Mora and starring Christopher Walken as Strieber. The movie covers material from the novel Communion and a sequel Transformation and which has themes not present in the books.

The Master of the Key

In the pre-dawn hours of June 6, 1998, Strieber was reportedly visited in his Toronto hotel room by a mysterious but apparently human man, who delivered an unsolicited lecture covering various subjects from spirituality to the environment. The man gave no name but Strieber has taken to referring to him as the "Master of the Key." Strieber first reported the visit in his online journal in 1998 and later gave a more complete account in his self-published book The Key (2001). Skeptics have pointed out that The Key and the 1998 journal entries give different (not contradictory but non-overlapping) accounts of what the man said.

Before publishing The Key, Strieber co-authored, with Art Bell, The Coming Global Superstorm (1999), a book about the possibility of rapid and destructive climate change. He has said that it was based largely on things the Master of the Key had told him about the environment. The book served as the inspiration for the disaster film The Day After Tomorrow (2004) and Strieber later wrote a novelization of that movie.

Another recent book Strieber says was inspired by the teachings of the Master of the Key is the self-published The Path (2002), which deals with the symbolism of the Tarot of Marseilles.

Current works

Whitley Strieber is currently the host of the paranormal and edge science-themed internet podcast, Dreamland, available on a weekly basis from his website, UnknownCountry.com. The program was a former companion show to Coast to Coast AM, with both shows founded by broadcaster Art Bell, before being taken on by Strieber in 1999.

Strieber has also returned to writing novels in recent years, including The Last Vampire (2001), and Lilith's Dream (2003), both being sequels to his 1981 vampire novel The Hunger. As well, he has authored 2012: The War For Souls (2007), a horror novel about an interdimensional invasion, and Critical Mass (2009), a thriller about nuclear terrorism. Strieber also co-authored the graphic novel The Nye Incidents (2008), along with co-authors Craig Spector and Guss Floor.

His next novel, The Omega Point, is a novel "based on a hidden connection between 2012 and the Book of Revelation"[1]. This title is due for release in 2010.

Media appearances

Strieber wrote an essay in Timothy Greenfield-Sanders nude portrait book, XXX: 30 Porn Star Photographs and appears in interviews in Thinking XXX, a 2004 HBO documentary about the making of that book.

He makes a cameo appearance in the 2009 movie Race to Witch Mountain.

Cultural influences

In the TV series Babylon 5, there is an alien race that is similar to the Greys in Communion. This race is named the Strieb after Whitley Strieber.

Swedish Progressive Metal band Evergrey wrote their 2001 concept album, In Search of Truth, around the ideas presented in "Communion" after the band's singer Tom S. Englund read the book.

Personal life

Whitley Streiber is currently a practicing Catholic. He was also formerly associated with the Gurdjieff Foundation. He left the Foundation shortly before the experiences reported in Communion but remains interested in the mystical teachings of G. I. Gurdjieff and P. D. Ouspensky and makes frequent references to them in his non-fiction writings.

Strieber is married to Anne Strieber. They have a son, Andrew, who appears in Communion and several of Strieber's novels (for example, Warday).

See also

References

  1. ^ [1]

External links

Whitley Strieber
Novels: The Wolfen (1978) | The Hunger (1981) | Black Magic (1982) | The Night Church (1983) | Warday (1984) | Wolf of Shadows (1985) | Nature's End (1986) | Cat Magic (1986) | Communion (1987) | Transformation (1988) | Majestic (1989) | Billy (1990) | The Wild (1991) | Unholy Fire (1992) | The Forbidden Zone (1993) | Breakthrough: The Next Step (1995) | The Secret School (1996) | Confirmation: The Hard Evidence of Aliens Among Us (1998) | The Coming Global Superstorm (2000) | The Key (2001) | The Last Vampire (2001) | The Path (2002) | Lilith's Dream: A Tale of the Vampire Life (2002) | The Day After Tomorrow (2004) | The Grays (2006) | 2012: The War for Souls (2007)
Films
Wolfen (1981) | The Hunger (1983) | Communion (1989) | The Day After Tomorrow (2004) | The Grays (2008) | 2012: The War for Souls (2010)

 
 
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