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Fastwalker: A Novel [Paperback]

Jacques Vallee (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 29, 1996
An Air Force pilot has died in a strange accident over Dreamland, a secret base in Nevada. The President of the United States has not yet been briefed. Scientists from all over the world are being assembled inside Pyramid Base. The Manipulator is General Bushnell, head of a secret organization which has been trying to capture a flying saucer since the early days of the UFO mystery. Suave but utterly ruthless this cold warrior has every tool of high-tech wizardry at his fingertips and a crack team of skilled operatives under his control. The investigator is Peter Keller, a dedicated journalist with a lot to prove, struggling to keep his integrity in the sensational atmosphere of tabloid media. A flawed but gusty professional, he's ready to travel to the ends of the Earth to solve the mystery of UFO abductions. The victim is Rachel Rand, a young woman caught between the nightmarish alien beings who stalked her on a lonely Long Island road and a bizarre cult of UFO believers who are convinced that the end of the world is imminent. Can she trust the man she loves to help her discover the truth about her tormentors?

Now an unearthly craft has been secretly captured by the scientific team of General Bushnell. What it contains can indeed spell the end of human history as we know it. But are human beings ready for that knowledge? And who will control it?

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Jacques Vallee is an internationally known UFO researcher.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 232 pages
  • Publisher: Frog Books (February 29, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1883319439
  • ISBN-13: 978-1883319434
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,988,149 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Jacques VALLEE holds a master's degree in astrophysics from France and a PhD in computer science from Northwestern University, where he served as an associate of Dr. J. Allen Hynek. He is the author of several books about high technology and unidentified phenomena, a subject that first attracted his attention as an astronomer in Paris. While analyzing observations from many parts of the world, Jacques became intrigued by the similarities in patterns between moderrn sightings and historical reports of encounters with flying objects and their occupants in every culture. The result was the seminal book Passport to Magonia, published in 1969.

After a career as an information scientist with Stanford Research Institute and the Institute for the Future, where he served as a principal investigator for the groupware project on the Arpanet, the prototype of the Internet, Jacques Vallée co-founded a venture capital firm in Silicon Valley. He lives in San Francisco.

 

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Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fastwalker, a book on UFOs: Science FACTion?, March 30, 2008
This review is from: Fastwalker: A Novel (Paperback)
As a novel I'd say it's a little uneven, yet has a number of gripping, moving scenes that make it worthwhile and entertaining as an adventure tale. Plus it has a little humour sprinkled through it, and a budding romance between two key characters.

Even more important than the entertainment value is it presents many of Vallee's informed opinions and speculations about the UFO phenomenon, after a lifetime of study.

There is another uniquely intriguing aspect of the book:
The idea that much of the book's depiction of a long time secret organization within the US gov't that specializes in the UFO field, the novel calls "Alintel" - may be based on real facts about US gov't black ops. programs.

I'd urge anyone interested in this aspect of the book to search online for detailed comments by Dr. Jack Sarfatti about Fastwalker. Sarfatti, a physicist, knew Vallee and many of his circle in the San Francisco area over the years. Sarfatti says Fastwalker "is an essentially factual report thinly disguised as sci-fi"...[and]..."Vallee's book is not really sci-fi. It is what Tim Leary called 'science fact-ion', allegedly thinly disguised top secret black ops."

The notion that Vallee was privy to some inside knowledge about secret gov't programs is not far fetched at all. He has revealed he was involved early on with the CIA sponsored "remote viewing" program which ran 20 years, along with people like Russell Targ, Hal Puthoff and Ingo Swan.

And Sarfatti reveals that a UFO research organization NIDS, privately financed by a real estate tycoon named Bigelow, had Vallee on its scientific advisory panel. And "NIDS was staffed by former CIA, Army Special Forces, and FBI".

A few of Vallee's ideas that are contained in Fastwalker, and also in his non-fiction writings and statements are:
That the UFO phenomenon is real, but it may not be as simple as ETs flying craft from solar system X to Earth, and back again.
He suggests it may have to do instead with inter-dimensional contact, that UFOs appear from another dimension that is parallel with, even intertwined with Earth, yet different from Earth.

Vallee believes the US gov't response to the phenomenon is a complex one.
The gov't knows it's a real phenomenon, but its understanding of it remains limited.
Also, the gov't has been guilty of shenanigans surrounding the phenomenon, such as deliberately staging elaborate simulations of UFO events and contact in order to gauge human reactions, and to conduct psychological warfare experiments.

Vallee also believes the gov't has been quite involved in infiltrating
UFO cults and UFO research organizations, in order to help it gather data, but also to shape perceptions, and to help encourage and disseminate various beliefs about UFOs, sometimes bizarre ones, to help muddy the waters of public perception. To discredit, and to hold UFO beliefs up to ridicule, has been a gov't goal at various times.

The above ideas are ones Vallee presents both in Fastwalker and in his non-fiction works. But Vallee has said that writing in novel form allows him freedom to express things he wants to say about UFO phenomena that
may be inhibited when writing non-fiction. It seems writing Fastwalker allowed Vallee to expand upon his ideas, do some speculating, as well as present certain factual things in fictional guise, because he didn't feel so free to write about them as non-fiction!

Vallee also touches on the unique methods of propulsion that UFOs
use, and their ability to move in ways that seem physically impossible.
Zero point energy as a possible propulsion source is touched on.
This is something Dr. Sarfatti has done some research on, and his
comments in this regard, findable online, are interesting. Those who
understand physics (I don't)might benefit too from the equations Sarfatti presents re. zero point energy, and warping of space-time, as possible explanations for UFO propulsion.

What's important about Fastwalker is that it's more than just an entertaining novel about UFO phenomena!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars COMMENTS ON "FASTWALKER" - A novel by JACQUES F. VALLÉE, January 24, 2009
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This review is from: Fastwalker: A Novel (Paperback)

"Fastwalker" is one of the latest novels written by well known Ufologist Dr. Jacques Fabrice Vallée.

The issue I have, has been published in 1996 by Frog, Ltd., in Berkeley, California, and it contains a total of 220 pages.

In the "Note to the Reader", Vallée puts a warning. He says:

"This is a work of fiction inspired by real events, but primarily designed to entertain. As such, it does not necessarily reflect my own views as a scientist researcing the UFO phenomenon."

With this warning, Vallée tries to play safe from any criticism, debate, and or danger that his ideas could trigger.

Anyway, I would like to call the attention of the reader to the fact thaf he recognizes that his work is "inspired by real events", and that saying that "it does not necessarily reflect my own views" does not mean that effectively it reflects his own views on the subject.

Anyone who has read the books about UFOs written before by Vallée will find its ideas developed to a degree he did not do before. The story and the characters belong to fiction, but it is my viewpoint that the ideas exposed by Vallée are real and they constitute as such, the core of his written work.

The Prologue (pages 1 to 6) with the "abduction" of an Papuan aborigine and his return to his forest, is a brief but excellent introduction to what will come later. In the middle Vallée refers to psywar, MK ULTRA, MK DELTA and some other experiments.

The important thing in this Prologue are the words put in the mouth of one important fictional character, that of General Bushnell, when he says:

"Anyone who didn't believe that we could accomplish this missions in less than twenty-four hours using today's off-the-shelf technology hasn't paid attention to scientific developments in the last twenty years. And anyone who doubts such experiments have in fact been conducted since World War II without the public or Congress being aware of them is woefully out of touch with reality." (page 5).

Very well said. It's a reality in spite of the fact that here is part of a fiction story.

This assertion by General Bushnell, takes us directly to the very existence of a "cryptocracy"(as it is defined by another character of the novel, on page 46).

Which means an organization of Intelligence, that is apart and above any other existent in the USA. That is "Alintel", a name Vallée took from "a French-language novel published by Mercure de France in Paris en 1986".

"Alintel" is the creation of a President of the United States in the `50s -according with the novel-- "designed as a black project: No records, no traces, no bureaucratic trails. There were only twenty-eight members at the beginning." (page 86).

The goal of Alintel is "a long-term control of the planet". The creation of the myth of spaceships coming to Earth from outer space, and of ETs, or EBEs as their crews, fill that purpose.

Alintel manipulates people and situations. The main thing is a psychological control of the masses, using masked dwarfs and sophisticated technology.

Along the way, Alintel is behind almost any UFO organization, and ET cults. Vallée writes about NICAP, APRO, etc.

A key element in the novel appears on Chapter 12, where a character named Desmond Byrne - a Professor of Phylosophy-- is the vehicle Vallée uses to say some down-to-earth things about the whole UFO subject, and about some real individuals, as for instance our friend Dr. J. Allen Hynek who is protrayed as an "honest man".

It is in this Chapter when Vallée writes about the Battelle Memorial Institute, the Robertson Panel, the Pentacle Memorandum, the BlueBook, Projects Stork and White Stork, etc.

One very interesting thing put in the mouth of Byrne, is this:

"there is a real cover-up", but "It isn't the reality of this particular phenomenon they are covering up, it's what they've done with it. All the little horrors they can't reveal, the sins they've hidden from us all these years". (page 110).

But probably nothing defines better the real situation about the UFO subject that the phrase Vallée puts in the lips of another character named Vulcan:

"The right hand of Alintel is concerned with strategic deception. In the last forty years we have conditioned the U.S. public, indeed, the world masses, to expect visitors from outer space." (page 196).

Is it still room for a real phenomenon?

Yes, and the answer that Vallée gives is this:

"Beyond the human level there are many layers of consciousness around the Earth -but not space people." (page 199).

I read this novel in less than three days. It is amazing and fascinating.

It should be read by every seriously dedicated UFO investigator, and for any person who wants to understand better the whole issue.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Fast Walker, May 28, 2000
By 
This review is from: Fastwalker: A Novel (Paperback)
The fact that Vallee decided to write (cooperate) on a `fiction novel' (not seen from Vallee since his youth) is a curious note in and of itself. Fast Walker is a somewhat focused story while thinly woven around a `balanced' set of characters, representing the UFO genre, more prevalent in the Eighties. The lives of an abductee; a UFO writer/researcher; a military `working group' and a fanatical UFO cult leader all converge toward a climax as the plot thickens. The book is quite useful for contrasting various elements of the UFO scene while creating a sense of `being there.' The outlook portrayed in the end raises a battery of questions and an alternate theory for the UFO question when compared to recent, mainstream thought. Entertaining.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Rachel Rand was running late, and it was well past five-thirty that fateful Saturday when she finally found the right street in the fashionable but convoluted Long Island neighborhood where the birthday party was held. Read the first page
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Brother Ralph, Colonel Trent, Air Force, Greg Parker, Ellis Denton, Joe Wilkinson, Peter Keller, Captain Hall, Helmut Borodine, White House, New Mexico, New York, Rachel Rand, Ben Simon, General Bushnell, New Age, Four Corners, Bill Renslow, Blue Book, Doctor Borodine, Galactic Science, Space Brothers, Beverly Bernard, Robertson Panel, Thomas Archer
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