A journey into the most secret place in America A story of secrecy, suspicion, and conspiracy A history of a place that does not legally exist
Dreamland zooms in on Area 51--the nearly four million acres of Nevada airspace that has been a base for experimental military aircraft, the fount of UFO rumors, and the alleged site of alien insurrection. How this real-life legend came to exist is Phil Patton's tale. He explores the mystery and fantasy surrounding the place, peeks over the edge of paranoia, and tracks strange objects in the air above this country of the mind. He visits spies and counterspies, test pilots and secret agents, and tunnels into the subcultures of true believers and conspiracy buffs. Reviewers have applauded Dreamland as "brilliant," "fascinating," "weird, wonderful, sometimes spooky," "curiously epic, frequently humorous, and always entertaining." Dreamland is a novelistic tour de force that makes us all rethink our convictions about American know-how--and alien inventiveness.
Phil Patton is a contributing editor at Departures, Esquire, and I.D., a contributing writer at Wired and an automotive design writer for The New York Times. Phil was a regular contributor to The New York Times Home and Garden section and, in 1998, originated the "Public Eye" column. He has written many books including: Made in USA: The Secret Histories of the Things That Made America (Grove-Weidenfeld, 1992), which was named a New York Times notable book of the year; Bug: The Strange Mutations of the World's Most Famous Automobile (Simon & Schuster, 2002); Michael Graves Designs: The Art of the Everyday Object (Melcher, 2004); and Dreamland: Travels Inside the Secret World of Roswell and Area 51 (Villard, 1998). He has also written for Art in America, ARTnews, Connoisseur, Geo, Harper's Bazaar, Men's Journal, The New Republic, New York Magazine, The New York Times Book Review, Rolling Stone, Smithsonian, Travel + Leisure, Traveler, The Village Voice and Vogue. Phil was the Editorial Consultant on the Guggenheim Museum's "Motorcycle" show in 1998 and Consulting Curator for the "Different Roads" exhibition at MoMA in 1999. In 2000 he was consultant and contributor for "On the Job: Design and the American Office" at the National Building Museum in Washington.
More informative on Black Aircraft than on UFOs and crazy paranormal stuffs. Very well written and very interesting, but I did stop reading about halfway through.
I started this book thinking only it would be about UFOs, but it is so very much more. In fact, before I got very far I started over reading it out loud to David on our trips to Batesville, Searcy, etc. where ever we had errands and business. He also enjoyed it. Dreamland is the name of the airstrip at Area 51 - Restricted Air Space and about the people who hang out at the perimeter with big cameras and binoculars to see what yhe can - the youfers, interceptors, stealthies, etc. The big names are PsychoSpy, Interceptor and other colorful characters. A main hangout is the A "Le" Inn. The author goes pretty thoroughly into the beginnings of the ufo hunters, the people seeking proof of secret weapons, the Skunk Works, etc. Karl Jung makes it in with his theories of ufos. Quite an amazing and interesting retelling of the history and speculations and stories woven around this base. Much better and more interesting than I expected when I started.
"What would happen if the U.S. government opened its doors to us and let us see all that was going on? Depending on what is there, we'd either be vindicated or disappointed, but we would also rapidly lose interest. What would we focus our attentions on? Where would we go next?....the greatest thing about Area 51 is its mystery, otherwise nobody would care."
Dear readers, I have a confession. In middle school, I was way into alien conspiracy theories, specifically the Roswell Incident. I didn't believe anything had happened, but it was fun to pretend that it did. My bedroom walls were littered with three things: tiger photographs, glow-in-the-dark star stickers, and posters of green bobble-head aliens, sometimes dressed as hippies offering peace signs. So, when I ran into Dreamland while looking for a similarly titled book on rural drug epidemics (Dreamland: the True Tale of America's Opiate Epidemic), I had to try it out. Right?
It took me a few check-outs to actually read the book, because it's an odd kind of investigatory tourism that begins with the paranormal, shifts to completely sober and extensive discussion of military test aviation, and then swings back to more severe paranormal material towards the end. The author plays the part of reporter-tourist searching for the truth, presenting himself as neither credulous nor particularly skeptical. Like Herodotus, he simply reports what he is told, though there's an obvious personal interests in what 'Area 51' truly is.
Dreamland is not solely about 'the' Area 51, the conspiracy codename for Groom Lake, Nevada, where experimental jets are/were tested. 'Dreamland' as a place covers much of the southwest; it is not merely 'The Ranch' of Nevada, guarded by private paramilitary 'camo dudes', but the headspace world in which the subjects of this book live -- and while some of them believe devoutly in alien visitation and even in-progress takeover, others believe the alien talk is mere coverup for more ominous projects. One interviewee opined that the alien hype is being created by the military which will use a faux-alien invasion to effect a coup. The last quarter of the book is a bizarre mix of conspiracy theories, Christian and Islamic prophecies merging with alien obsession and political intrigue: fear of a 'New World Order', so intense in Endtimes believers of the 1990s, is very strong here. My personal favorite, in part because it's the sort of thing I would do if I were in charge of a secret government project, is that Area 51 is cover, used to distract the public; the real base is in Tonopah. (Of course, if I were in charge of the secret government project, I would put it underground and then stick a shopping complex on top of it.)
Although the first and final fifths of Dreamland are very odd reading, fraught with true-believer syndrome ("Yes, the flying saucer we saw was a B2. But they're just letting us see it so we won't freak out about the real flying saucers!"), there's actually an enormous amount of information on military test aviation throughout the late 20th century, including on projects that were scrapped but which are now declassified. Many of the aircraft mentioned bear little resemblance to conventional aircraft, at least to a public expecting to see something that looks like a commercial transport or fighters. The proposed A-12 Avenger is downright alien. Dreamland features a chapter on the development of unmanned spy vehicles from spy planes like the U2, and speculates that soon these UAVs may be armed. (He was right: three years later after publication, a Predator drone blew up the outside of a Taliban building, wrecking cars and sending the actual target running away instead of crossing the Styx.)
If you're interested in experimental aviation, this actually has a few chapters of note. The actual subject of the book may distract from the fascinating bits inside, though, and considering the context of the source I'm not sure how seriously I'd take the information on CIA spy planes and the like.
Thomas Pynchon’s (unexpected? or maybe not!) blurb is what convinced me to buy a ticket to Dreamland, and the place does not disappoint! In 1998, America existed somewhere between the promise of a tech-driven, globalized millennium and the interminable paranoia of the Cold War mandate for global hegemony. Enter then the Nevada airspace, where - depending who you ask - the Air Force and CIA have been developing top secret spycraft for decades… or extraterrestrials have been meeting with the president during timely breaks from a golf outing. Maybe both?
Patton’s aptitude as a watcher and dreamer himself is on display as he details the Area 51 tourist industry; the declassified histories of secret aircraft; the cultural impacts of clandestine federal budgets; and whether any or all of the lingering questions about what we see in the sky are a misdirection away from what really matters. Entertaining and informative, never kooky, and seriously insightful, read this book if you are like me and topic of UFOs is endlessly interesting to you! I want to believe!!
"A mind-opening tale of trespass and revelation, of road adventures, technothriller hardware, saucer folks and aerospace outlaws -- as well as a daring account of the haunting of our history through the Cold War and beyond by what we have seen, and often wish we had not seen, in the hazardous dreamscape of the American sky."
I find it difficult to describe this book. It is a sort of ramble through the world of classified military bases and military research into aircraft, with side trips through Roswell and the various UFO-investigators. Not anything like the sober historical journalism of "Area 51" by Annie Jacobsen, but chock full of fascinating character sketches and anecdotes.
This book posits one essential query which remains unanswered to this day: what is the value to the US of the secrecy demanded by the aviation military-industrial complex?
This is a nostalgia-inducing book for me. I was never interested in UFOs beyond the cultural elements (I did seriously consider an ethnography of ufologists as my thesis.) but several friends were way into it. This book reminded me of my more-freewheeling and -thinking 20s. I enjoyed the aviation material more than the UFO material, and I think I definitely want to read out the bibliography on this one, if I get the chance. It is a fascinating subject.
As for the essential query? I can't deny the value of secrecy to the overall strategic interests of the US military...but deceit at that level is a Pandora's box. Look at current events: how credible is anyone, especially the experts and authorities?
In a democracy, we need to know where the money is going, or there won't be a democracy to demand the accounting.
finished 31st october 2022 good read three stars i liked it kindle library loaner first from patton interesting tale for the most roswell area 51 experimental aircraft the secrecy those who spend the better part of their lives watching...some of that is a bit tedious...there was a johnson involved and he hales from my neck of the woods...and on top of that there is a dreamland bar and grill about five miles away down bootjack road...was there before they began using the word dreamland out west. i've no doubt an alien craft and aliens were discovered near roswell and that gov't has since changed their initial take on the matter and i've also no doubt that the public will never be provided a true account of that or any other related event.
My wife stumbled across this and requested it for me from the Library. This was written in the later 1990's at the height of the alien-UFO Phenomenon.Fairly researched and very conversational. Some of the material and events depicted have been either proven or debunked in the last 20 years. A better book is Area 51 by Annie Jacobsen which was written in 2011. That book is exhausting in its research.
If you are interested in aliens, UFOS and Roswell, are well read on the subject already, this is a great book took curl up with as it is so fun to read. Another book that is better I recommend is the day after Roswell By Phil Corso.
This is a reasonably straightforward history of Area 51 with some references to Roswell. It is NOT nutty. It attempts to be objective and mostly succeeds. Where it does not succeed, the author points that out. I appreciate that.
I might read this book again, but only for reference.
pretty solid and grounded treatment of the topic with a lot of stuff i didn’t realize was basically public knowledge back in 98 (like the bennewitz/doty disinfo stuff and MJ 12). good source for anyone wanting an overview of the ufo as social phenomenon and just a lot of fun to read.
Dreamland is a fun read, thanks to Phil Patton’s entertaining writing style and his dogged willingness to uncover the mysteries surrounding Area 51. It’s also an important book in the sense that we finally have a credible investigation into the complex and elusive world of Area 51 - a world that Patton coins as “Dreamland.” However, don't be fooled into believing that Dreamland supports any of the conspiracy theorist claims. In fact, much of Patton's findings do more to debunk them.
Patton's admirable efforts to gather as much empirical data on far-reaching claims of the existence UFOs inside Area 51 often and invariably lead him into very murky water. However, seeing this through the eyes of a journalist, you get the sense that the "youfers" and the higher-profile witnesses of UFOs are just plain full of baloney. Never once during Patton's campaign to find the hidden truth is the author surprised, amazed or taken aback by any tangible evidence or revelations.
Though it's no fault of Patton’s, the lack of any shred of stirring evidence of the existence of UFO's in Dreamland makes this book just a tad anticlimactic. In this vein, I disagree with some other reviews of this book. For example, the back cover says, "Reviewers have applauded Dreamland as brilliant, fascinating, weird, wonderful, sometimes spooky, curiously epic, frequently humorous, and always entertaining." In fact, Patton's closing statement - the final sentence of the book, seems to contradict this notion: "...This seemed appropriate, but as with so much in Dreamland, it proved impossible to determine conclusively.” (Patton pg 299). There's not much in Patton's findings that would leave a reader spooked or fascinated. I would temper the back cover comments down to "brilliant, interesting and entertaining."
The most famous figure that Patton investigates is an engineer/physicist named Bob Lazar. It's no surprise that Patton finds Lazar's job titles and credentials to be questionable. Lazar claims that he actually worked on flying saucers hidden near Groom Lake. While Patton collects interesting stories through former contacts of Lazar, he finds no evidence or accounts to corroborate or support Lazar's outlandish tales. Patton discovers that Lazar was eventually arrested in 1990 for pandering - around the time that Lazar tried to open a brothel in Los Alamos. Do most physicists have time for these types of endeavors?
Patton's assiduous and unrelenting study of Area 51, military aircraft, "youfers", UFO folklore and UFO history is full, thorough and colorful. It's likely that Patton would make a study on any topic readable and interesting. And perhaps as an unintended consequence, this book will educate the average reader on the history of military aircraft. Patton's in-depth inquiry left me skeptical about the existence of UFOs and it has given me a critical attitude toward the conspiracy buffs. The amount of conjecture is disproportionately large compared to the flakes of evidence that anyone can provide when it comes to the existence of flying saucers in Area 51.
I should add that Patton also deserves credit for putting himself at risk on several occasions when he tries to get himself as close as possible to key sites in Dreamland. He is often chased away or threatened by military security.
Dreamland is an enjoyable read. But be forewarned: It won't convert you to a conspiracy buff. Rather, it may turn you into a skeptic.
Phil Patton’s Dreamland is kind of a rambling travelogue that slips past the military checkpoints of the remote Nevada desert, heading toward the elusive Area 51 and the base’s dodgy history of secret military aircraft, UFOs, and government conspiracy. Hiking up to Freedom Ridge, the high point that allows a glimpse down into the restricted airfield, Patton rubs shoulders with Interceptors and Youfers -- airplane buffs and alien enthusiasts respectively – crafting a book that is a pastiche of aviation history, extraterrestrial investigation, pop culture, and odd characters.
Unfortunately, it’s also a book that’s really hard to follow. Patton packs in plenty of interesting nuggets, but the book never really grabs it’s through line, ending up a murky jumble as it jumps from the real to the speculative, from character to character, from time period to place, hopscotching like a jack-rabbit. The disorganization made my forehead wrinkle, puzzling past obscure military code names and half-truths – and maybe that’s Patton’s intent – to give the reader just a taste of the heady brew of information, misinformation, and disinformation that surrounds Dreamland – but this book just kind of lost me.
Usually, I'm a sucker for that mix of 'real-world' history meets 'weird-world' history, but this is one where I had to fight to get to the last page.
To learn that by treaty the Russians are allowed to overfly Area 51 unencumbered while the taxpayers who paid for it are threatened with deadly force for approaching the gate is outrageous. Add to that the inherit laziness of a system where everything is classified and nothing is secret, and you've got a big mess to clean up.
I want to know what the Russians know. I'd be willing to bet they'd sell the info if the price is right... wonder what that figure would be?
Is it treason to purchase US Top Secret info from a foreign country? Or only to sell it to a foreign country? I'd better get a lawyer to look into this first.
I thought the book well-researched (as well as can be, anyway) and reasonably thought out.
I'd hoped to read about flying saucers and aliens from outer space, but, alas and alack, all I got was a thoroughly-researched history of Area 51, the development site for top-secret military aircraft. Much of what the author presented as speculative in 1998, when the book was published, can now be verified at the National Museum of the United States Air Force in Ohio, and in photos and videos released by the military.
He writes wittingly, as seen in this quote from the book: "In 1986 Testor released a model of the F-19 Stealth fighter. The model set off a small storm in Washington. How could a model company know what America's most closely guarded secret looked like, when our Congressmen themselves did not know ? " All in all, I highly recommend this book.
"The story of Area 51 and the Nevada Test Site are fascinating enough without embellishment and relying on bar stories. If you want a good Area 51 book get Dreamland by Phil Patton. It is based on facts and when speculation is made, he clearly states that. "
For all you who give this 5 stars for who knows why please do some of your own research. You can easily find better information on the Nevada Test Site, the nuclear rocket program, Project 57, etc than you will get from this book. If you want a history of Area 51, get Dreamland, if you want spy plane stories, get "By Any Means Necessary" by Burrows, for nuclear rocket stuff get Dewar's "To The End Of The Solar System".
Full of the usual stories about Area 51. It did have some interesting histories of planes built w/o the publics knowledge. I don't think I'd recommend this to anyone...