When people worldwide think of British UFO cases, they might think of the crop circles in Wiltshire. They might also think of the Rendlesham Forest incident, where a UFO landed on a joint RAF/USAF airbase at the height of the Cold War, resulting in the famous newspaper headline "UFO LANDS IN SUFFOLK - AND THAT'S OFFICIAL". If they are well read in UFO lore, they might even have heard of the Warminster Thing case which attracted hordes of George Adamski-esque hippie contactees to rural Wiltshire in the mid/late 1960's. 10 years later than Warminster, Wales went through a massive wave of often very strange cases which remain comparably obscure. The one well known case from the Welsh UFO flap of the mid/late 70's is the Berwyn Mountain case, probably on account of being one of the few with a clear mundane explanation.
"The Uninvited" by Clive Harold follows one of the weirdest and most disturbing of the Welsh UFO cases - that of the Coombs family's many strange experiences in 1977. The Coombs family did not just witness several UFO landings near their farm. They also experienced interruptions and malfunctions striking the electric appliances in their home, stalking by very tall men wearing silver spacesuits and sickly looking Men In Black whose physiognomy matched that of no ethnicity on the planet as well as repeated incidents where the livestock on their farm disappeared from their stables only to return on the nearby farmer's field. All that despite the Coombs having locked the stables and the padlocks still being intact when they checked afterwards. The aforementioned MIBs were also described as driving a futuristic silver car whose bodywork did not resemble any production car that had existed at the time. All of this is decidedly uncanny, and Harold writes the story like a captivating and disturbing horror novel with no clear answers that happens in real life.
However, there are some things about this book that look suspicious the more you think about them. There are no primary sources listed, no photographs or even maps of the farm where everything took place. I cannot tell for sure how much of it happened exactly as the author describes and how much might be embellishment to tell a cracking good yarn. Reading "the Uninvited", I got flashbacks to Charles Berlitz' books about the Roswell UFO Crash and the Bermuda Triangle which came across as convincing until I learned about Berlitz' omission of key information that make mundane explanations more appealing, if not downright misrepresentations of the facts of the cases at hand. I wonder whether the account of the Coombs family's UFO contact tribulations given in "The Uninvited" is a similar story, with Clive Harold functioning as an across-the-pond Charles Berlitz here?
After having seen the documentary film "Mirage Men" and read the book by Mark Pilkington that inspired it, both of which revolve around the revelation that the USAF cultivated much of the American UFO mythology to distract from its own secret test flights, I suspect the Royal Air Force and the MI5 might have been engaging in something similar here. Imagine the RAF testing prototype VTOL aircraft that locals mistook for flying saucers, equipped with ahead-of-their-time electronic jamming equipment designed for disrupting communication systems. The RAF could also have unusually tall personnel dress up in spacesuits and stalk the family, and done others up to look sickly while modifying a car to look like something from the future in order to give the "MIB" a convincingly unearthly transportation method. There are no hard evidence yet for this theory, but I can't help but ask "cui bono?". After all, Harold describes the Royal Air Force at first claiming to the Coombses that they were investigating the incidents as well but then turn around and deny they could do anything about it. If Harold didn't make turn of events up, this suggests the RAF knew more than they let on. I would not be surprised if a "Mirage Men" style game of smoke-and-mirrors was at play here as well.