Press enter or spacebar to select a desired language.

Gray Barker Birthday Celebration

Gray Barker Birthday Celebration

About this event

Body

Celebrate the 100th birthday of noted writer, hoaxer, and teller of tales Gray Barker!

Explore the Gray Barker archives, which were acquired by the Clarksburg-Harrison Public Library after his death, and join us for a special presentation by author Gabriel Mckee. At 6:00, Mckee will discuss his latest book, The Saucerian: UFOs, Men in Black, and the Unbelievable Life of Gray Barker. 

Gabriel Mckee is a librarian at New York University's Institute for the Study of the Ancient World. His research concerns popular culture, book history, theology, and parahistoriography. His recent work includes The Saucerian: UFOs, Men in Black, and the Unbelievable Life of Gray Barker (MIT Press), co-editing the volume Theology and the DC Universe (Lexington Books), and serving as managing editor for the Zebrapedia project, an online repository of manuscript material by science-fiction author Philip K. Dick.

The Saucerian: UFOs, Men in Black, and the Unbelievable Life of Gray Barker, Summary by MIT Press:

"The strange, but true biography of the colorful founder of Saucerian Books, a central purveyor and promoter of flying saucer and conspiracist knowledge in the mid-twentieth century.

 Gray Barker (1925–1984) was an eccentric literary outsider, filled with ideas that were out of step with the world. An author and unreliable narrator of implausible stories, Barker founded and operated Saucerian Books, an independent publisher of books about flying saucers and other ideas at the fringes of popular discourse. In The Saucerian, Gabriel Mckee tells the fascinating story of Barker's West Virginia–based press, the unique corpus of materials it published, and how office-copying and self-publishing techniques influenced the spread of paranormal beliefs and conspiratorial worldviews over the last century. Following the development of UFO subculture, Mckee explores the life and career of a larger-than-life hoaxer and originator of pseudoscientific ideas.

Ever an entertainer, Barker established his reputation with one of the first flying saucer fanzines, The Saucerian, and with his first book, the conspiratorial and sensationalistic They Knew Too Much about Flying Saucers. By the close of the 1950s, he had established a publishing imprint that brought out some of the strangest UFO-related books of the era, with a particular emphasis on flying saucer contactees. Saucerian Books became a platform for those whose stories were too unusual, implausible, or crudely written for more mainstream publishers. Though Barker himself was a skeptic, he viewed the world of occult believers as a source of ongoing entertainment. He also may have used the perceived eccentricity of flying saucer research, or “ufology,” to obscure his homosexuality from his small-town neighbors. From his place on the fringes of midcentury American culture, Barker left an unmatched legacy in conspiratorial concepts that have become prominent pop-cultural folklore, including the Men in Black, the Mothman, and the Philadelphia Experiment. As a mastermind behind the fantastical, Barker's promotional efforts were the precursor to contemporary conspiracism."

**The Waldomore and Barker archives will be open at 4:30 PM and close at 8:00 PM on Friday, May 2. All programs are free and open to the public.**