After Contact Audiobook By Rees Haynes cover art

After Contact

What UFO Disclosure Would Change About Everything

Virtual Voice Sample

Get 30 days of Standard free

Auto-renews at $8.99/mo after 30-day trial. Cancel anytime
Try for $0.00
More purchase options

After Contact

By: Rees Haynes
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
Try for $0.00

$8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $9.99

Buy for $9.99

Background images

This title uses virtual voice narration

Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
This is the second book in a series that began underwater.

The first volume, Aliens in the Ocean: A History Beneath the Waves, explored the long and largely forgotten record of anomalous objects observed in and beneath the world's oceans – a phenomenon that predates the modern UAP conversation by centuries.
This book looks forward. It asks the question that the first volume raises but does not answer: what happens next? If the phenomenon is real – and the weight of military testimony, sensor data, congressional legislation, and presidential directives increasingly suggests that it is – then what does confirmation change? Not in the abstract. Not as a thought experiment. But practically, concretely, in every domain of human civilization: science, energy, religion, politics, security, psychology, economics, and the fundamental question of what it means to be human in a universe that is more populated than we assumed.
I want to be clear about what this book is and what it is not. It is not a claim that non-human intelligence has been confirmed. As of this writing, in early 2026, the official position of the U.S. government's investigative body, the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, remains that no verifiable evidence of extraterrestrial technology has been found. Whistleblowers have testified under oath to the contrary. Legislation has been drafted that presupposes the existence of non-human technology. A sitting president has ordered the release of files. But confirmation – in the definitive, scientific, no-longer-debatable sense – has not occurred.
This book operates in the space between those two realities. It takes the evidence seriously without pretending the question is settled. It explores the implications of confirmation without asserting that confirmation has arrived. It is, in essence, a preparation – an attempt to think clearly about a possibility that is approaching faster than most institutions have been willing to acknowledge.
The research draws on congressional testimony, military documentation, declassified intelligence reports, legislative text, academic studies, and journalism from defense, science, and policy publications. Where claims are contested, I have noted the controversy. Where evidence is classified and unavailable for independent verification, I have said so. Where I am speculating, I have made that clear.
The tone of this book is deliberate. There is no shortage of UAP literature that sensationalizes, that leaps to conclusions, that treats speculation as certainty. There is also no shortage of literature that dismisses, that ridicules, that treats the entire subject as beneath serious consideration. I have tried to occupy the space between those two failures – the space where the evidence is taken seriously, the questions are asked honestly, and the reader is trusted to think for themselves.
If you are coming to this subject for the first time, this book will give you a comprehensive overview of where the disclosure question stands and what is at stake. If you have been following the conversation for years, I hope it offers a framework that connects the disparate threads into a coherent picture of what the moment demands.
The world may be about to change in ways that none of us fully understand. This book is an attempt to understand as much of it as we can, before it arrives.
Freedom & Security Intelligence & Espionage Politics & Government Unexplained Mysteries Technology
No reviews yet