Skinwalker Ranch — Hunt for the Skinwalker: The 2005 Book
Skinwalker Ranch — Hunt for the Skinwalker: The 2005 Book
[edit | edit source]Publication Details
[edit | edit source]| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Full title | Hunt for the Skinwalker: Science Confronts the Unexplained at a Remote Ranch in Utah |
| Authors | Colm Kelleher, Ph.D. and George Knapp |
| Publisher | Paraview Pocket Books (Simon and Schuster imprint) |
| Year | 2005 |
| Sherman pseudonyms | "Tom and Ellen Gorman"; "Gorman ranch" |
| Pivotal impact | Read by DIA official James Lacatski; directly led to the AAWSAP $22 million program |
| Sequel | Skinwalkers at the Pentagon (2021; Kelleher, Lacatski, Knapp) |
Content
[edit | edit source]The book presents:
- The Gorman/Sherman family's experiences — the full range across the 18-month tenure
- NIDS methodology — the monitoring apparatus and investigation approach
- Specific NIDS-era events documented by field researchers
- Kelleher's personal encounters including the tree creature
- Hypotheses considered: hoax; collective delusion; undiscovered advanced human civilization; extraterrestrial; ancient aliens; Tectonic Strain Theory (Persinger)
- The honest assessment: very little conclusive physical evidence despite sustained investigation
The Book's Pivotal Role
[edit | edit source]The book's most consequential impact was on James Lacatski of the DIA. His reading of Hunt for the Skinwalker led to:
- His personal visit to the ranch
- His firsthand experience of anomalous events
- His advocacy within the DIA for a formal research program
- The creation of AAWSAP — a $22 million classified government program
A single published book about a paranormal ranch in Utah directly produced a $22 million Pentagon program. This chain of causation is the most remarkable institutional consequence of any paranormal publication in American history.
Critical Reception
[edit | edit source]The book was skeptically received in mainstream scientific circles but sold well within the paranormal community. Its notable virtue — acknowledged even by critics — was candour about the investigation's evidential failures. This honesty distinguished it from typical sensationalist paranormal accounts and gave it the credibility that ultimately reached a Defense Intelligence Agency program manager.
