I’ll bet it was quite a party…
October 8, 2010
October 4, 2010
Gray Barker’s “Grunt” Letter
1967 was a particularly strange year for John. He had realized that he was increasingly unhappy writing for television, and had turned away from the field. By late 1967, he had become a full-time ufologist and fortean, and was fielding a daily barrage of bizarre reports from witnesses and from other researchers, and puzzling over strange letters and phone calls.
Many other researchers were too; and the field had become a tangled mess of rumors, disinformation, hoaxes, tests, accusations, and suspicions. It seems as if UFOS were often forgotten in the confusion. Gray Barker was in the middle of it all, and known to stir things up for the fun of it. I suspect that was the case here: he sent this letter to John, addressed to fellow researcher Jim Moseley; the references to “the old man,” the numbers, and the odd signature seem designed to promote paranoia. John suspected it was a prank, but also considered the possibility that it was a hoax by someone else to test his response, sow dissension, or track channels of communication; and he and his contacts exchanged long letters about these possibilities. As I said, it was a strange year.
ADDENDUM (12/12/12): I’ve posted a better scan of the letter. And I’m adding John’s notes on the letter.
September 24, 2010
John Keel with Joe Gould


Joe Gould was one of Greenwich Village’s most famous personalities, celebrated for his exuberant and uncompromising Bohemianism, and for his elusive life’s work, An Oral History of Our Time — as well as for being profiled in Joseph Mitchell’s book, Joe Gould’s Secret. He’s seen here in a photo from the New York Star (July 7, 1948), at the annual fence exhibit by the Ravens Poetry Circle, where poets pinned their creations to a fence outside Judson Church, on Washington Square. And that’s the 18-year-old John A. Keel, behind him.
John Keel in “Our Space Age” (6)

And this is the last of the series. John continued to be a fan of the feature; and kept a file of the tear sheets that Binder sent him.
September 17, 2010
“It Could be Verse”





Just for the fun of it, here’s a sample of John’s schoolwork. He handed in this English assignment when he was 14: it included a few short original ditties, but was mostly a collection of his favorite poems, lettered by hand, and embellished with a few drawings and photos. His taste ran to limericks, Christopher Morley, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Edgar Guest. Looking at this little booklet, it’s hard to believe that a mere three years later, he would be working as a professional writer–and editing a poetry magazine in NYC!
September 15, 2010
September 8, 2010
The Mothman Festival
It’s time for the Mothman Festival! The annual festival in Point Pleasant, West Virginia, will take place on September 18 and 19. There will be speakers, music, vendors, and all sorts of things. Take a look at www.mothmanfestival.com; and at www.mothmanlives.com and www.mothmanmuseum.com. And all hats off to Jeff Wamsley for organizing it!
And here, for the curious, is a notice about the first Mothman Congress, organized by Gray Barker back in 1968 (from Saucer News, #73, Fall/Winter 1968/69).


September 1, 2010
“Scraping the Keel”


As many Keel fans know, one of John’s first forays into journalism was a column called “Scraping the Keel,” for the Perry Herald. Here’s an example of it — this is an undated proof sheet, but it was probably some time around 1946.





