"For eight years, a team of highly trained scientists and others came face-to-face with a terrifying reality that, on superficial examination, appeared to break the laws of science but that, in fact, was consistent with modern-day physics. At the ranch, scientists found a world where a great deal of activity was hidden from visible sight but, as the researchers soon discovered, was detectable with state-of-the-art instrumentation... In addition to eyewitness testimony, we obtained an intriguing body of physical evidence to support many of the accounts described in the book. We compiled photos and videos and accumulated reports of demonstrable physical effects on people, animals, equipment, everyday objects, and the environment..."
So, this book has been on my list for years, and wanting to read something a little... different..., I figured I might as well check it out finally. I'm generally pretty skeptical when it comes to stuff like this, but at the same time I think I'm open-minded enough to consider it. (In other words, I don't have a Fox Mulder poster on my wall that says "I want to believe" but I realize that a lot of people would be skeptical of my religious beliefs, too).
"Skinwalker Ranch" is located in eastern Utah in the Uinta Basin. It's probably best known for nearby Dinosaur National Monument. Apparently there's a TV show about the ranch, too. A family of cattle ranchers moves from New Mexico and immediately experiences all manner of strange stuff: Enormous wolves who are impervious to bullets. Menacing demons. Surgically precise cattle mutilations. Strange lights. UFOs. Mysterious portals to other dimensions. Crop circles (sorta). Disembodied voices. Poltergeists. Frightening demi gorgon-like dogs. Freemasons and Buffalo Soldier graveyards. And Bigfoot. Yes, he's here too. Eventually, when the family is ready to cry 'uncle,' a well-funded investigation takes over the ranch to study it scientifically.
"... the incredible variety of paranormal experiences we encountered at the Skinwalker Ranch... It’s as if some cosmic puppet master had written a laundry list of every spooky phenomenon of modern times and then unleashed them all in a single location, resulting in a supernatural smorgasbord that no one could possibly believe, even less understand."
I'm a bit familiar with the area, since my grandma lived out there (Duchesne and Roosevelt) and we spent most of our vacations there while I was growing up. My grandpa would take us fishing all over the area, usually on the Indian reservations (which needed a different fishing license than the ones we'd brought with us). It's a place with its own unique beauty. I never saw anything paranormally unusual myself and don't recall hearing talk of it, but chalk that up to being a kid, I guess. And while the book is strenuously earnest about its investigation, I just didn't see any compelling evidence presented. Many of the local narratives are supposed to be believable because the witness was 'reluctant to talk' and 'wanted to remain anonymous.' There are none of the mentioned photos in the kindle version I read. There isn't really even much in the way of the experiences of the scientists, and what there is, is pretty weak. The last few chapters go through the possibilities one-by-one, but it's structured to lead the reader toward the suggested conclusion.
"The ideas of visionary thinker Giordano Bruno were so unsettling to the political, religious, and scientific establishment of his day that he was burned at the stake for espousing them. The modern science establishment, which is viewed by some as the equivalent of a harsh and unforgiving religion with its own strict commandments and rigid code of conduct, no longer burns its outcasts, but it certainly excommunicates those who stray too far from the fold."
I can sympathize with the argument that the institution of "Science" is as dogmatic as any of the religions it disdains, but there's just not much to go on here. I wanted to give the author and the family the benefit of the doubt and tried to read it with an open mind, but I was constantly bothered by the lack of skepticism where I thought it was obviously warranted. It was a (grudgingly) "okay" read, but I had to push myself to finish the book. (And no, I won't be watching the TV show.)