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SAI-smThe work of Montana State University Professor Emeritus Ardy Sixkiller Clarke has drawn acclaim around the world. She brings to the field of ufology degrees in history, English, psychology, and educational leadership and a background as a professor, licensed therapist and psychologist, and social science researcher. On the heals of her bestselling books, including More Encounters with Star People: Urban American Indians Tell Their Stories, comes her newest book, Space Age Indians: Their Encounters with the Blue Men, Reptilians, and Other Star People.  This work—which is a product of Clarke’s personal access to the American Indian community—is, without a doubt, her most startling and eye-opening book to date.

moreenounctersProfessor Ardy Sixkiller Clarke’s new book, More Encounters with Star People: Urban American Indians Tell Their Stories, is an eagerly awaited follow-up to her bestselling first book, Encounters with Star People: Untold Stories of American Indians. But unlike the first book, this one features the stories of American Indians who live off the reservation. And unlike almost all other books of UFO sightings, Clarke experience of interviewing the witness becomes part of the story. In the process she becomes part UFO investigator, part journalist, part therapist, and part friend. The result is an authenticity that is unequaled in the UFO literature. Don’t miss it!

r2mWe normally don’t boast (well, yes we do), but it’s well-recognized that Anomalist Books publishes some of the most important works of UFO research in the world. Our latest, Return to Magonia, by Chris Aubeck and Martin Shough, has been receiving high praise lately. About their investigations of cases in UFO history, folklorist Thomas E. Bullard says, in his review of the book in the Journal of Scientific Exploration: “This book is not intellectual candy to feed favorite beliefs or a sounding board for speculative theories. What this book is, is a work of serious scholarship. Seldom are such deep research, careful analysis, and stringent arguments found in the UFO literature, and Return to Magonia is exemplary both in the … research goals it undertakes and its success in carrying them out….This is fine work through and through, and exemplary of UFO research at its best.” Equally enthusiastic is the historian known as “Dr. Beachcombing,” who in his bizarre history blog review of the book says: “The book is a lot more than just a series of x-files cases….Chris and Martin have bottled the Fortean formula. Here is a natural science murder mystery: let’s solve it, or better still let’s fail to solve it an interesting way, leaving some flashes of the numinous on the horizon. There is also perhaps a hint of the underdog. The book was written by two part time researchers who pack more punch than many university teams in their use of astronomy, meteorology and the wealth of archive material on the internet…. What a fantastic book!”