The key by Whitley Strieber

The Key by Whitley Strieber

In the pre-dawn hours of June 6, 1998 Strieber was allegedly visited in his Toronto hotel room by a mysterious but very ordinary-looking elderly Caucasian man who delivered an unsolicited lecture covering various subjects from spirituality to the environment. When queried the man airily suggested that he might be called "Michael" but Whitley has taken to referring to him as the "Master of the Key". Strieber first reported the visit in his online journal in 1998 and later gave a more complete account in his self-published book The Key (2001). Skeptics have pointed out that The Key and the 1998 journal entries give different (not contradictory but non-overlapping) accounts of what the man said. Strieber's mention of his personally-devised system of shorthand or abbreviated note-taking in an interview with George Knapp on June 19, 2011 might at least partially account for this apparent discrepancy as the author had to reconstruct the entire 45-minute conversation with his visitor from a series of barely-legible squiggles he discovered by his hotel bedside upon re-awakening from deep sleep much later that same morning. He also chose to emphasize different subjects or aspects of the exchange according to how he surmised they could best be assimilated by his readers. Strieber claims that the stranger in his room informed him that humans have an electron floating in front of their foreheads, and that that may indeed be their soul. He also claimed the stranger handed him a vial of unknown white liquid, instructed him to drink it, and he did.

The Key Link

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  • Thanks for posting this. I recently read the Key, but really enjoy the added bonus of digesting the material as an audiobook. As with much of Whitley's writing, I find it very intriguing, though I'm not always sure how much is fact and how much fiction.  Very thought-provoking, especially (for me) the comment the stranger makes about the secret to anti-gravity propulsion having been thwarted due to the death of an unborn child's parents in the holocaust. Thanks so much! 

    • I was intrigued by that also.  Some of his books like "The Grays give them attributes that personal experience did not encounter and that also makes me wonder. Is it poetic license or is it just that he had more remembered experiences.    -------------------------------------------  R

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