Mr. Hall has just published a forth book in the set of Millennial Hospitality books entitled Millennial Hospitality IV After Hours. The last sentence of the first paragraph in the forward reads as follows; "The identities of people continue to be concealed, but everything in Millennial Hospitality IV, as in the earlier volumes, is true and happened to me while serving in the United States Air Force (USAF) in the mid-nineteen sixties."
A similar statement, that the book is a fictional account based on the author's actual experiences while serving in the United States Air Force appeared in the opening pages of the first book in the series. The opening pages of the second and third books are vaguer and indicate that the books are fiction. Obviously there is conflicting information here.
If there is even a smidgen of truth at all in these books, they relate one of the most unsettling series of alien encounters that I have ever read, and he says in this volume that every bit is true. He lists the website http://www.millennialhospitality.com* in the latest book which I went to and found equally troubling.
Contrary to the book description that states that, "this fourth volume offers more startling details that help confirm his experiences and help usher in new era of official disclosure of extraterrestrial life," there is nothing really new in this volume. Rather than being a continuation of the series of books it is more like a sequel to them. It is 336 more pages of the smartest guy in the Air Force wondering around "startled and confused" in the Nevada desert.
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof and the three (3) independent witnesses that are said to have, "come forward to confirm important parts of Hall's testimony," left me unconvinced. Where is the little human girl from Indian Springs today, who played at night with the tall white "Teacher's" alien child? She is an adult now if she survived; why isn't she talking and writing books? What happened to the 41 weather observers who preceded Charlie on the ranges and freaked, and why aren't they talking? How about those weather observers who followed him? And I can't imagine a space shuttle launch from Groom Lake in broad daylight that wasn't seen from Las Vegas. You can see a shuttle launch from Cape Kennedy from almost anyplace in Florida. How come, after traveling light years from another solar system in their spacecraft, tall whites are interested in studying diesel generators and guys blowing up balloons? By the way, when was the last time you saw a diesel engine with a carburetor? It's an Air Force secret I guess.
It's been awhile since I read the other three (3) books, and I can't recall if the events described in them were as hard to reason as the ones he describes in volume IV, but this book describes events that just don't make any sense. For example, why would an advanced civilization and a bunch of Air Force Generals, night after night, drag an airman out of bed and parade him around outside in his underwear? Why would highly advanced aliens hid in the desert to watch a guy let a balloon go, day after day, not to mention bring space bus loads of touring aliens and children to see him? How could anybody remember what happened to them day after day forty (40) years ago without rigorously keeping a diary?
Aside from questioning the validity of the story and overlooking the numerous typographical errors, the book certainly holds your attention and provides an interesting read, and true or not, I would recommend the book for its entertainment value alone.