David M. Jacobs is an American historian who recently retired from a position of Associate Professor of History at Temple University. He specialises in 20th-century American history and culture. Jacobs is, also, well known in the field of ufology for his research and the books he has written on the subject of alleged alien abductions.
"Walking Among Us is a chronicle of human experience that
contradicts every current theory about the universe that we think
we live in. Jacobs' human observers have experienced a concealed
reality that is literally next door to some of us, and that he
believes is about to interact, secretly and insidiously, with the
rest of us. Walking Among Us explains why extraterrestrial UFOs are
here, who is aboard them, and what they are doing. To put it
mildly, the evidence from the people that Jacobs has interviewed
shows that the extraterrestrials are up to no good. You will find
Walking Among Us hard to put down. If enough of us read and pay
attention to the evidence in this book, we might be able to avoid
the disaster that its evidence portends." --Don C. Donderi, PhD,
associate professor (retired) of psychology, McGill University,
Montreal, author of UFOs, ETs, and Alien Abductions-- "Reviews"
"David Jacobs has spent his career as a history professor at a
major university, and--what matters most of all--he backs his
claims with an impressive mass of evidence....Jacobs treats his
subject with ethnographic depth and detail, but without academic
ponderousness." --Thomas E. Bullard, PhD, board member, Center for
UFO Studies and Fund for UFO Research and author of UFO Abductions:
The Measure of a Mystery-- "Reviews"
"David Jacobs has written an extremely important book about UFO
abductees and the meaning of their abductions." --Ron Westrum, PhD,
emeritus professor of sociology, Eastern Michigan University--
"Reviews"
"Once we accept the extraterrestrial origin of UFOs and that the
beings can act purposefully as rational beings invariably do, it is
only a small step from UFO phenomena to the co-residency of the two
species. It is this logical consistency that makes Walking Among Us
constantly grip our imagination with such vengeance." --Young-hae
Chi, D Phil, faculty of Oriental studies, University of Oxford--
"Reviews"
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