REVOLUTIONARY
POLITICAL
SCIENCE
SPECIES
BIO

Gerald McIsaac is a Caucasian mountain man who has lived with the Indigenous Mountain People for over forty years. They have provided him with detailed descriptions of various animals which he recognizes, animals which the scientific community considers to be long extinct. During that time, he has been attempting to prove the existence of these animals, as yet without any success.
At the same time, he has been trying to determine the reason the scientists refuse to acknowledge the existence of those same animals. The only answer that makes any sense is that the government is determined to deny its existence. Any scientist who challenges that government denial is risking career suicide.
As Gerald McIsaac does not have a career, he has no career to lose. For that reason, the ''little science project'' has expanded to include a condemnation of the government, based on capitalism. That is the reason for the political articles, as well as the scientific articles. As Gerald McIsaac puts it, ''I just go where my investigation leads me.''
For armchair Bigfoot hunters, Gerald McIsaac is living the dream. Drawn from years of living with the Dene people in the remote mountains of British Columbia, Bird From Hell is his field report on fantastical megafauna. Using stories of local villagers and his own research as evidence, he explains that Devil Birds, Lake Monsters, and giant Sasquatches exist in the wild today. The reason no one has found these creatures is simple, he posits: no one has ever looked.

For armchair Bigfoot hunters, Gerald McIsaac is living the dream. Drawn from years of living with the Dene people in the remote mountains of British Columbia, Bird From Hell is his field report on fantastical megafauna. Using stories of local villagers and his own research as evidence, he explains that Devil Birds, Lake Monsters, and giant Sasquatches exist in the wild today. The reason no one has found these creatures is simple, he posits: no one has ever looked.
NEWS & EVENTS
This Week In America
BIRD FROM HELL: THIRD EDITION - Gerald McIsaac
Jan 8, 2020

Interview with Al Cole
PEOPLE OF DISTINCTION - Gerald McIsaac
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REVIEWS
For armchair Bigfoot hunters, Gerald McIsaac is living the dream. Drawn from years of living with the Dene people in the remote mountains of British Columbia, Bird From Hell is his field report on fantastical megafauna. Using stories of local villagers and his own research as evidence, he explains that Devil Birds, Lake Monsters, and giant Sasquatches exist in the wild today. The reason no one has found these creatures is simple, he posits: no one has ever looked.
Clarion Rating: 4 out of 5
In August 2011, a New York Times article reported that, according to researchers, 85 percent of land creatures and more than 90 percent of sea creatures have yet to be discovered. That bit of news may sound strange, particularly in an age when someone living in Manhattan can access ground-level images of the Serengeti from an online satellite map.