
The Fourth Mind is the first book ever to explore the anatomy, brains, genetics, beliefs and capabilities of the unknown entities the author refers to as "the visitors." He maintains that they have a set of abilities he describes as a "fourth mind" that include such powers as telepathy, levitation, the ability to move heavy objects without machinery, and many others. He then shows that there is a rich store of evidence that mankind once possessed these same powers, and that hidden knowledge of them has persisted into the 20th century. Uri Geller says, "As the Fourth Mind breaks new ground in analyzing the physical bodies of the mysterious beings Whitley Strieber calls "the visitors," it can truly be called revolutionary." Famed UAP Researcher Jacques Vallee says, "By calling attention to the dangers of Washington procrastination, Whitley Strieber is one again forcing the issue before the public." Retired CIA Officer and close encounter witness Jim Semivan says, "The Fourth Mind is clearly the best book to date on who the Visitors are, physically and spiritually, and what humanity must do to prepare for a possible introduction to them. Highly recommended." There has never been another book like The Fourth Mind. It marks the beginning of a new way of thinking about who and what we are, and points toward the re-empowerment of mankind as a truly cosmic species.
Author

American writer best known for his novels The Wolfen,The Hunger and Warday and for Communion, a non-fiction description of his experiences with apparent alien contact. He has recently made significant advances in understanding this phenomenon, and has published his new discoveries in Solving the Communion Enigma. Strieber also co-authored The Coming Global Superstorm with Art Bell, which inspired the blockbuster film about sudden climate change, The Day After Tomorrow. His book The Afterlife Revolution written with his deceased wife Anne, is a record of what is considered to be one of the most powerful instances of afterlife communication ever recorded.