About this deal
This stuff is superior schlock and it’s fascinating in terms of Cold War paranoia, and American exceptionalism.
Little green men in white coats: Pant Y Wacco, according to John Lloyd and Douglas Adams, in the wonderful Meaning of Liff, is the state of mind of retired Lieutenant Colonels before the men in white coats come to take them away. A landmark expose firmly grounded in fact, "The Day After Roswell" puts a 50 year-old controversy to rest. And as with anyone who has worn a uniform and served to protect, he deserves the gratitude and respect of every American. The technology derived from the crashed spaceship and the nature of the aliens as chip-implanted clones would lead to a worldwide tech revolution. There are appendices with a few intra-governmental memos and detailed plans for a hypothetical military base on the Moon, but nothing that really supports Corso's accounts.
Unlikely, considering the extremely high secrecy requirements and Corso's advanced age and lack of resources.
Liz Hartman, director of publicity for Pocket Books, said in the same New York Times article; “We absolutely stand by the book. What could have been a descent book was rendered completely unenjoyable by the author's constant self aggrandizement. We get the impression from Corso's account that damn near any advancement in technology in the past 60 years or so has its roots in alien hardware found at the Roswell crash. Overall the book was a very good read and is peppered full of interesting bits of information about how aspects of the government acts and responds behind closed doors which most of the general public would never catch on too through Philip J.The catalyst for the book is the alleged crash landing in Roswell, New Mexico, of an extraterrestrial scout craft. Most crackpot books are written by faceless weirdos making claims that by their nature can't be disproven.