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Shuttlewood's Books

The Warminster Mystery - HB

Neville Spearman cover

The Warminster Mystery - SB

Tandem cover

The Warminster Mystery

London: Neville Spearman, 1968
London: Tandem, 1973, repr. 1975

From the blurb:

Warminster, a small Wiltshire town, was the focus for a remarkable series of UFO sightings in 1965. Hundreds of local people, and UFO investigators who visited the area in the years which followed, have observed and studied these astonishing phenomena.
The Warminster Mystery is a dramatic unfolding of these sightings, with eyewitness accounts of strange "things" seen by day and night; of bewildering mushrooms of smoke, crescents of fire, weird and disturbing sounds and even accounts of conversations with those from outer space.
The illustrations in the book include several fully authenticated photographs of UFOs taken in front of witnesses.
Warnings from Flying Friends

Warnings from Flying Friends

Warnings from Flying Friends

Warminster: Portway Press, 1968

Shuttlewood's first sequel to The Warminster Mystery was self-published by Portway Press in 1968.

From the blurb:

This could prove the most important contribution so far to serious literature on these flying mysteries, in pursuit of what the author calls 'the tantalizing trail of elusive arial phantoms.' He has carried out continous on-the-spot obeservations of UFOs at Warminster, the most UFO-haunted locale in the world, for over two years. His research has been spread over three years. It qualifies him as a leading investigator into this special and unique field of enquiry.

The second cover is from the US edition of 1978 (Global Communications, 1978). Suspected, from the cover, of being a CE3K tie-in.

UFOs: Key to the New Age

UFOs: Key to the New Age

London: Regency Press, 1971

The third and final book in what has become known as the "Warminster trilogy". Shuttlewood thought, at the time, that this would be his final book on the Warminster Mystery.

From the blurb:

At once a gateway and entrance to new dimentions in universal thought and existence, the third book on the aerial mystery from the penetrating pen and mind of Arthur Shuttlewood carries the conviction of six years of on-the-spot evidence of Flying Saucers in the notorious Warminster area of England.
The Flying Saucerers

The Flying Saucerers

London: Sphere Books, 1977

From the blurb:

UFOs over rural England!
Celestial chariots that glow in the heavens are not figments of our imagination! After ten years of close study of unidentfied flying objects, Artthur Shuttlewood examines numerous eye-witness accounts, relates chiiling personal experiences, and provides strong evidence for extraterrestrial life - flying saucerers who are trying to make contact with us on Earth. But for what purpose?
UFO Magic in Motion

UFO Magic in Motion

London: Sphere Books, 1979

From the blurb:

Shimmering spheroids hovering over the British Isles.
UFO Magic in Motion is Arthur Shuttlewood's most penetrating study yet of a phenomenon which has captured the imagination of millions of people. Mr Shuttlewood examines innumerable eye-witness accounts of close encounters of the first, second and third kind which provide strong evidence for the existence of extraterrestrial life. He raise the issue of whether these lifeforms are friendly or aggressive, and what their purpose is in appearing to us in their mysterious spaceships.
More UFOs over Warminster

More UFOs over Warminster

London: Arthur Baker, 1979

From the blurb:

Arthur Shuttlewood uses his experence as a researcher and author to discuss some possible explanations of these strange phenomena. Could they be connected to visitations of long ago, or could they be from another time dimention? What is the sigificance of the fact that UFOs are so often sighted close to ley lines and around places of ancient historic and religious interest like Stonehenge and Glastonbury? Could they be connected to, or caused by nuclear explosions?
Whether you are a sceptical, a believer, or have an open mind on the UFO controversy, you will be irresistibly fascinated by this account of UFO activity concentrated around Warminster."
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