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Appalachian Case Study: UFO Sightings, Alien Encounters & Unexplained Phenomena Volume 2

West Virginia journalist Kyle Lovern is at it again—putting together another fascinating book about eyewitness accounts of UFOs and strange encounters from the Appalachian region. His first book, Appalachian Case Study: UFO Sightings, Alien Encounters and Unexplained Phenomena, took readers on an amazing journey of exploration through the eyes of many down-to-earth folks who told Lovern about their experiences. Using his background in newspaper and radio, Lovern conducted interviews with various citizens about their unusual encounters and extraordinary experiences. Although that book focused solely on incidents occurring in the Mountain State, his new project probes into occurrences taking place in a larger section of the Appalachian mountain region, where individuals from West Virginia and neighboring states document unusual and weird events they cannot fully explain.
Author Kyle Lovern has been a popular guest on radio shows like Coast to Coast AM, with George Noory, and has been a guest on a variety of international Internet radio programs.
See www.kylelovernufos.com for more information about Kyle Lovern.
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REVIEW: Lovern pens 2nd UFO book, mulls 3rd
By Mannix Porterfield
Published in the Beckley, WV Register-Herald
Nov. 29th, 2009
WILLIAMSON, W.Va. - Author Kyle Lovern figures West Virginia’s rural makeup, devoid of huge metropolitan congestion, makes the state particularly appealing to visitors from other worlds. Already, folks have come forth from the hills to share with him enough material to fill two books on the subject and jump-start him on a possible third.
His second effort, titled “Appalachian Case Study: UFO Sightings, Alien Encounters and Unexplained Phenomena, Volume 2,” and featuring an artist’s conception of a spaceship hovering about trees on the cover, was published by Woodland Press less than two weeks ago, and already has stirred some erstwhile shy people to step up and talk.
West Virginia is sparsely populated, and its rolling hills with deep recesses inside forests likely are popular with aliens, Lovern estimates, because ample hiding space is provided.
“I think they do like remote areas,” he says. “If you ever fly over and look down, you realize how remote we can be.”
Lovern draws on personal accounts of people living in Kentucky, West Virginia and Virginia. Two people who unraveled personal accounts to him were clergymen, and this, he feels, adds another layer of credibility to an issue that often has been clouded by hoaxes and mistaken sightings.
“The stories continue to keep flowing in,” he said.
Just recently, while he and his wife put in some early Christmas shopping, two people recognized the author and hit him up for a chat. One wanted to relate his own encounter with a UFO. Lovern feels his reputation as not only a writer but a researcher is making more and more people comfortable about coming forth.
“They’re willing to share with me,” he said. “They’re not as inhibited as they were in the past.
“The ones that I talked to seem very sincere. I’m sure there are a couple you get sometimes that you’re a little leery of. But I weed through those and try to get the ones that are real credible. I think most of the ones that contact me are pretty honest, salt of the earth people.”
Until recent years, most observers were reluctant to be identified with a UFO sighting, fearing taunts and scorn from the general public. Now, however, since ex-astronauts Edgar Mitchell and Gordon Cooper have come out, and there have been revelations that both Presidents Reagan and Carter saw strange objects in the sky, the public as a whole is less bothered by what skeptics may say or think of them, Lovern says.
Invariably, the doubters demand hard evidence — a broken antenna or landing wheel from a ship, maybe?
Lovern believes there is some proof, pointing to soil and vegetative samples taken at places UFOs were spotted, or a mystical crop circle.
“Those samples show unusual properties when they are examined by scientists,” he said. “A lot of times, nothing would grow back.”
Given today’s plethora of videocams and cellular phones, Lovern expects to see even more refined photos taken to substantiate the sightings.
Between now and working on a third book — he already has enough for about seven new stories — Lovern might find himself as part of a popular cable television outfit digging into the theory of ancient astronauts and their alleged roles in human history.
“I did get a call from The History Channel,” he said. “They may come and interview me.”
To answer the doubters, Lovern points to the mysterious crop circles left implanted in the earth across the planet, largely in England, but a few in West Virginia.
“I’ve read of cases where people will drive by a field and there’s nothing there,” he said. “Half an hour later, there is this extravagant design. Not just a circle. Anybody could do a circle. They’re such geographical designs. It’s unbelievable. There’s no way a couple of men could have done those, as huge as they are, and to make them as perfect as they are, when you see an aerial photo of them.”
One tale in his second book is about a Cherokee tribe running across a peculiar disc in a meadow.
As the story goes, the Native Americans found more than a spaceship.
“They talked to the ‘little people,’” he says of the account. “So it’s possible an alien encounter occurred here in Appalachia.”
Lovern reasons the government has kept a lid on the truth ever since the 1947 incident in Roswell, fearing a breakdown in society.
“I think it’s because, during that time, it was for sociological and religious reasons,” he said. “They probably thought, if this came out, it would change the whole way people thought about our existence, our creation.”
Over the ensuing six decades, however, the American public has been flooded with sci-fi films, documentaries, books and the like, seemingly to the point of become desensitized. “I don’t think people today would be scared or panic,” Lovern said. “I think if you took a poll, the majority of people out there believe we’re not alone. There’s something to all these sightings and encounters.”
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REVIEW: New book reports UFO encounters in Appalachia
By Steve Hammons
Published in the Los Angeles Chronicles
Nov. 28, 2009
Eyewitness accounts of UFO sightings and strange encounters in the Appalachian Mountain region provide fascinating reading in a recently-published book by researcher, journalist and author Kyle Lovern.
Volume 2 of "Appalachian Case Study: UFO Sightings, Alien Encounters & Unexplained Phenomena" continues the exploration that Lovern began in the first volume, published in 2008.
Lovern brings a solid journalistic background to this challenging topic and the complex related factors involved. He is an award-winning journalist from southern West Virginia with a background in newspaper work as an editor, columnist, reporter and photographer, recognized for his writing and photography. He has also worked in radio.
Recently freelancing for the Charleston "Daily Mail," one of the state's largest newspapers, Lovern also recently received first and third place awards in the 2008 West Virginia Press Association newspaper contest. As a reporter, he has also covered county and state sporting events. For several years he was a popular newspaper columnist in southern West Virginia and eastern Kentucky. Lovern is a graduate of Southern West Virginia Community College and Bluefield State College. His work has also been featured in "Wild, Wonderful West Virginia" magazine, "Goldenseal" magazine of West Virginia traditional life and "Marshall Magazine" (Marshall University).
While Volume 1 of "Appalachian Case Study: UFO Sightings, Alien Encounters & Unexplained Phenomena" focused entirely on incidents in his home state of West Virginia, Lovern's new book also goes outside that state's borders to examine cases related to the Appalachian region of bordering states such as Virginia and Kentucky.
Lovern brings the objectivity and straightforward writing of an experienced journalist to the topic of unusual phenomena that is so needed in our society today. Like all good journalists, he looks at and tries to document important elements of a journalist's main targets: the "who, what, when, where, why and how."
MULTIPLE VIEWPOINTS
As with his earlier book, Volume 2 takes readers through the reports by down-to-Earth average people from different walks of life who have experienced something apparently quite interesting.
In addition, insightful quotes from famous public figures introduce each chapter and provide thought-provoking statements linked to UFOs and other unusual phenomena. Lovern uses quotes from astronauts Neil Armstrong, Edgar Mitchell and Gordon Cooper (Armstrong, an Ohio native, currently lives in Cincinnati, near the western Appalachian region).
Fascinating and sometimes cryptic statements by Sen. Barry Goldwater, Gen. Douglas McArthur and long-time FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover also lead readers into each chapter. Presidents Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton and Richard Nixon are also quoted.
Scientists Albert Einstein, Stephen Hawking, J. Allen Hynek (an official U.S. Air Force UFO investigator with the Dayton, Ohio-based "Project BLUE BOOK") and Harvard psychiatrist John Mack, M.D., provide similar insights. (Mack became well-known for his research into alleged abductions of humans by non-human beings.)
We even hear from filmmaker Steven Spielberg as we delve into one of Lovern's chapters.
Each chapter is a detailed account of a particular incident, carefully taken from the statements of eyewitnesses and individuals who directly experienced it, as well as reporting by the news media. In many cases, there were multiple witnesses to the incidents. In some instances, local public safety personnel were involved.
For example, in Chapter 2, a community college psychology professor and his two teenage sons were driving home one evening in 2003 near Morehead, Kentucky, and clearly saw an oval-shaped object or craft in the sky nearby. They also observed "dazzling" bright lights near the object.
Meanwhile, local police were getting calls from local residents of a woman screaming.
Upon arriving home, the college professor and his sons soon were visited by peace officers checking the neighborhood for a possible woman in distress. Soon, approximately 20 public safety, rescue and law enforcement personnel were searching a nearby field where the oval-shaped object had been seen by multiple witnesses.
It's unknown to the professor and his sons what happened to the UFO. A woman in distress was apparently never located.
DANGERS OF ENCOUNTERS
The potential dangers of encounters with UFOs were part of Lovern's account of a sad and touching report of a young boy who had apparent close contact with a beam of strange light from an airborne source or craft, and who died of a brain tumor approximately one year later.
The 11-year-old boy's family had moved from their home state of West Virginia to Detroit, Michigan, and in 1993 they boy and his friend were in the yard during a heavy snowstorm building a snow fort to play in.
Suddenly, an "aircraft" of some kind hovered approximately 50 feet above the boys and two beams of light flashed down on them. One light was reported to be yellow and the other blue, according to the boys' statements. An adult neighbor and other witnesses also saw the lights.
The boys were quite frightened, and shortly afterward developed an unusual rash all over their bodies, as well as other physical problems. Their emotional reactions to the incident were described as terror and fear.
But much more serious than these outcomes was the subsequent diagnosis of a brain tumor in the boy from West Virginia. He passed on from this medical condition in 1994.
Did the brain tumor have something to do with the UFO? We will probably never know. But, there have been other reports of UFO witnesses developing symptoms similar to radiation poisoning.
In Chapter 13, the potential dangers of close encounters are again noted in the account of three women driving through Kentucky in 1976. They saw an intense red glow about 11 p.m. and later seemed to have experienced "missing time" until 1:25 a.m. They noticed raw skin, blisters and odd marks on their bodies and they were unusually thirsty.
Under hypnosis by a psychologist at a later date, all three women reported similar accounts of being in a hospital-like setting, being examined and experiencing medical-type procedures by small beings appearing like the so-called "Grays."
Elsewhere in the book, Lovern also notes the public safety considerations of close encounters with UFOs that are addressed in the well-known firefighter manual "Fire Officer's Guide to Disaster Control."
This manual includes a detailed must-read chapter about the history and dangers of UFOs to public safety, including radiation, and the way public safety personnel should prepare and respond.
GROUPS OF WITNESSES
In Chapter 5, we read about the people at a West Virginia high school football game who saw a "large bright round object" moving slowly over nearby terrain in 1973. Witnesses from other locations also observed it. A local newspaper noted that it was the largest crowd in that region to ever have observed a UFO together.
When a local constable who observed the UFO from the football game was asked why he didn't shoot at it, he replied that it wasn't breaking any laws as far as he knew.
The 1987 "wave" of UFO sightings in Virginia is reviewed in Chapter 7. UFOs shaped like saucers, arrowheads and cigars were reported by hundreds of witnesses. Radio stations and other media outlets reported on these incidents.
One newspaper reported the case of a group of people in the parking lot of a local restaurant observing a UFO that looked like a Frisbee, with bright red and white lights on it.
Chapters 10 and 11 tell of the encounters of hunters in northern Virginia in 1965-66 who observed a flat ball-shaped object with a metallic dome for ten minutes, and the Navy Vietnam veteran who, along with forty other men, saw two huge lights near the West Virginia coal strip mine they where they were working.
Chapter 12 recounts a particularly unique case when a CSX train carrying coal through Kentucky collided with three strange flying objects that were hovering just above the track. The metallic silver saucer-shaped objects with multiple lights were 18 to 20 feet long, according to the witnesses.
After the train's electrical system was disrupted somehow, the automatic brake system kicked in, but it was clear that the train had collided with "something" since significant damage to the locomotives was apparent.
But what became more puzzling was when the engineer was directed by dispatchers to pull the train into an isolated location where unknown men in "weird outfits" began inspecting the train. The train workers were questioned while men in protective suits examined the locomotives.
Men who identified themselves as being associated with U.S. national security reportedly advised the train workers to remain silent about the incident, Lovern reports.
ANCIENT CHEROKEE APPALACHIA
The brief overviews above, describing a few of the book's chapters, provide a window into the valuable information contained in Volume 2 of "Appalachian Case Study: UFO Sightings, Alien Encounters & Unexplained Phenomena."
Lovern doesn't draw any conclusions about where these reported craft or beings come from. Are they simply from another planet? Or, is it a more complex situation involving multiple dimensions, wormholes and portals, or even time travel?
Many of today's scientists are trying to understand the physics of these possibilities. Psychologists and others are also researching a variety of unconventional phenomena that could be related somehow. We might also wonder if our defense and intelligence services are also taking a good look at these situations.
Lovern respects readers' ability to look at the information presented and come to their own conclusions ... or to simply digest the accounts and reports without coming to final concrete conclusions.
These may be mysteries that cannot be completely solved.
The chapters and elements in this excellent book provide part of the story of UFO encounters in the Appalachian region, the U.S. and the world over recent decades. But the situation may go back further in time.
The Appalachian region was the ancient homeland of the Cherokee culture and civilization, as well as other tribes, for thousands of years before Scottish, Scots-Irish and other immigrants also settled in the mountain country of Appalachia in the1700s and 1800s.
Many Indian tribes throughout North America have legends and tales of beings from the stars or from other dimensions in Nature who visited the Indians from time to time.
In a chapter toward the end of his book, Lovern notes the ancient Cherokee legends of the "little people," known as the "Yunwi Tsunsdi," according to the 1998 book "Cherokee Little People: The Secrets and Mysteries of the Yunwi Tsunsdi" by authors Lynn King Lossiah and Ernie Lossiah.
According to those authors and other sources, the little people are beings sometimes described in ancient Cherokee tales as being spirits or small human-like people, about two feet to four feet tall. According to the legends, these beings may have different types of appearances and may be of three or four different types.
Descriptions of the little people allege that they can be kind and helpful, especially to children, while also playing tricks on people. In addition, they can also be dangerous if a human intrudes on them. They reportedly have the power to confuse the mind of a human.
They have the ability to remain unseen and invisible if they choose and generally avoid being detected by humans. But, according to the ancient tales, at times they will reveal themselves.
Were the "little people" known to the Cherokee related to UFOs, inter-dimensional mysteries or some other unusual phenomena?
To explore these questions, Lovern also includes a creative tale from my fact-based fiction novel "Mission Into Light" when I used the real-life accounts of the Cherokee's Yunwi Tsundi little people to try illustrate a thought-provoking scenario from long ago in the Appalachian Mountains of the ancient Cherokee.
And, like the Cherokee and other Indian tribes of ancient days, we now seem to be dealing with mysterious forces and beings that visit us from time to time, conducting their activities in discreet and secret ways, while also occasionally revealing themselves.
And when they do reveal themselves, luckily we have researchers and journalists like Lovern to interview witnesses, carefully investigate and document their accounts, put the situation in context and inform the rest of us in effective communications platforms and books like Volume 2 of "Appalachian Case Study: UFO Sightings, Alien Encounters & Unexplained Phenomena."
Through Lovern's book, we see not only how unusual phenomena like UFOs might be occurring, but how average people react. The down-to-Earth people Lovern interviewed responded with surprise, curiosity, intelligence and appropriate concern and caution when faced with strange scenarios.
By picking up a copy of this book, we might further prepare ourselves with greater knowledge and understanding about emerging aspects of Nature and the Universe, or "multiverse," that we are now beginning to more fully comprehend.






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