Education
According to her publishers, Simon & Schuster, Randles studied physics and geology at university, has written articles for New Scientist, and has sold more than 1.5 million copies of her fifty published books
According to her publishers, Simon & Schuster, Randles studied physics and geology at university, has written articles for New Scientist, and has sold more than 1.5 million copies of her fifty published books
Randles specializes in writing books on UFOs and paranormal phenomena. To date 50 of these have been published, ranging from her first UFOs: A British Viewpoint (1979) to Breaking the Time Barrier: The race to build the first time machine (2005). Subjects covered include crop circles, Education Support Professionals, life after death, time anomalies and spontaneous human combustion.
lieutenant was stated in 1997 that her books had been published in 24 countries.
The same source states that she was the story consultant to the Independent Television television series Strange But True? that ran between 1993 and 1997, and that she has also done documentary work for the British Broadcasting Corporation. Randles is a regular contributor to the magazines Fortean Times and The Skeptic and has spoken at the UnConvention. She was editor of Northern unidentified flying object News (a 12-20 page A5 journal detailing unidentified flying object activity within Northern England) from 1974 up to 2001.
"" is a term invented by Randles in 1983 to describe the strange, seemingly altered state of consciousness commonly claimed by some witnesses of unidentified flying objects and other similar paranormal events. Randles has noted the strange calmness and lack of panic described by the witnesses, relative to the bizarre circumstances that they described and says that they described and defined the Oz factor as "the sensation of being isolated, or transported from the real world into a different environmental framework..where reality is but slightly different, the fairy tale land of Ounces" She has further noted that "he Oz factor certainly points to consciousness as the focal point of the unidentified flying object encounter.".