John Keel

Journalist

Birthday March 25, 1930

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Hornell, New York

DEATH DATE 2009-7-3, New York, New York, United States (79 years old)

Nationality United States

#59252 Most Popular

1930

John Alva Keel, born Alva John Kiehle (March 25, 1930 – July 3, 2009), was an American journalist and influential ufologist who is best known as author of The Mothman Prophecies.

Keel was born in Hornell, New York, the son of a singer and bandleader.

His parents soon divorced and Keel was raised by his grandparents in Perry, New York until his mother remarried.

He was fascinated by magic from an early age and was known as Houdini by his friends.

He loved reading about magic, humor, science, travel, and aviation.

His first story was published in a magicians' magazine when he was twelve years old.

At fourteen he was determined to become a writer.

He had a column in the Perry Herald called Scraping the Keel, he published a science fiction fanzine called The Lunarite and he routinely sent stories to magazines in New York.

At the age of sixteen he had taken all of the science courses at his school and decided to leave school and write full time.

At seventeen he moved to New York City to make a living as a writer.

He ended up in Greenwich Village and became the editor of a poetry magazine.

He worked as a freelance contributor to newspapers, scriptwriter for local radio and television outlets, and author of pulp articles such as "Are You A Repressed Sex Fiend?"

He was drafted into the US Army during the Korean War.

Because he had worked with radio and TV he was assigned to the radio station American Forces Network at Frankfurt, Germany and started writing radio programs.

Within one year he was the chief of productions for the network.

When his two years of military service ended he was offered and accepted a civilian job for the Army.

He claimed that while in the Army he was trained in psychological warfare as a propaganda writer.

After his time with the military he was as a foreign radio correspondent in Paris, Berlin, Rome and Egypt.

At 24 he resigned and traveled for four years around the Middle East and south-east Asia.

He tried to find performers of the Indian rope trick, investigate fakirs and yogis and he even tried to track the Yeti.

1957

That journey became his first published book, Jadoo (1957)

1960

During the 1960s, he worked in television.

He was the head writer for game show Play Your Hunch and wrote for tv shows such as Mack & Myer for Hire, the Chuck McCann Show, the Clay Cole Show, Get Smart, The Monkees and Lost in Space.

He wrote a couple of novels using the pseudonym, Harry Gibbs.

Like contemporary 1960s researchers such as J. Allen Hynek and Jacques Vallée, Keel was initially hopeful that he could somehow validate the prevailing extraterrestrial visitation hypothesis.

However, after one year of investigations, Keel concluded that the extraterrestrial hypothesis was untenable.

1966

In 1966 he wrote a fiction novel called The Fickle Finger of Fate.

It sold an estimated 600,000 copies.

In 1966 Playboy asked him to write an article about UFOs for the magazine, but his work was rejected and never put to print.

Keel had however become hooked on the subject.

He claims to have traveled to 20 states and interviewed thousands of witnesses, several hundreds of them in depth.

The material was used in his book Operation Trojan Horse.

1967

Keel coined the term men in black in an article for the men's adventure magazine Saga published 1967.

1968

He was a technical advisor to the Library of Congress (1968-69), and special consultant to the office of Scientific Research and Bureau of Radiology (1968-71), before becoming a consultant to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.

He was a member of the Screenwriters Guild.

Keel is considered "one of ufology's most widely-read and influential authors".

As a researcher he was both original and controversial.

Richard Hatem, the screenwriter for The Mothman Prophecies, has described Keel as the Hunter S. Thompson of paranormal writers.

1975

He also made repeated visits to Point Pleasant, West Virginia, and investigated sightings that turned into his most well known book, The Mothman Prophecies (1975).

His interviews and thoughts on the UFO subject were published in magazines such as Flying Saucer Review, Flying Saucer, Saga and Saucer News.