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Budd Hopkins (1931–2011)

Author of Intruders: The Incredible Visitations at Copley Woods

19+ Works 546 Members 7 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the names: Bud Hopkins, Hopkins Budd

Image credit: By Carol Rainey - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=36302260

Works by Budd Hopkins

Associated Works

The environmental handbook (1970) — Author — 121 copies
The Gulf Breeze Sightings (1990) — Introduction, some editions — 74 copies, 1 review
Abducted!: The Story of the Intruders Continues (1994) — Introduction, some editions — 38 copies
Phenomenon: Forty Years of Flying Saucers (1988) — Contributor — 31 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1931-06-15
Date of death
2011-08-21
Gender
male
Occupations
artist
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

9 reviews
A landmark in the study of UFOs. Budd Hopkins presents us with five cases of people who believe they were abducted by aliens. Typically, they will spot a UFO and later realize that they cannot account for an hour or more of their time. They may think they watched a UFO for a few minutes, only to have a family member tell them they were missing for a much longer period of time.

Through hypnosis, these people are able to recover their 'missing time' and recount abductions by alien beings. These show more five cases are presented to the reader as transcriptions of the hypnotic sessions.

Whatever you think of UFOs or recovered memories, the accounts presented here make for fascinating reading. Each one is colored by the narrator's personality and quirks. Details will shift and metaphors will vary. But as you read through them you will notice startling similarities and patterns.

While I am skeptical myself (I think one of the cases presented here was a person suffering from sleep paralysis), there is the intriguing question: Just what did happen in that unaccounted for time?

That question and Budd's low-key, non-hyperbolic presentation made the book more credible to me. By all accounts he was a commercially successful artist with paintings in prestigious galleries and wealthy clients, so this book doesn't feel like a money-making or attention-grabbing scheme. He does not come off as a kook or a crack-pot.

In general, I find it easy to dismiss so much UFOlogy. The field is rife with hoaxes and even genuine cases are often just mistakes of perception (natural phenomena or the sleep paralysis I already mentioned). But until I read a thorough debunking of the cases presented here, Budd has me at least willing to accept that most of these stores *could* be true.
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This incredible abduction experience quickly turned into a 4 part series. The book reads like an action/adventure/horror script. In the end, a lot of what Budd Hopkins documented on this case went on the become commonly accepted over time.
Lulz. This was the book that made me alien-crazy in the fifth grade. So bad. The lone star belies its must-read status.
Scared to bejebers out of me 25 years ago and I want to read it again.

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Statistics

Works
19
Also by
4
Members
546
Popularity
#45,668
Rating
½ 3.3
Reviews
7
ISBNs
32
Languages
5
Favorited
2

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