"Blurring the line of science fiction and fact, Sekret Machines is an
explosive thriller that will make you question everything you've been
told about what's really out there." -Larry King
A 2016 Foreword INDIES Book Award finalist, Sekret Machines: Chasing
Shadows is written by Open Mind's 2017 UFO Researcher of the Year and
acclaimed producer Tom DeLonge with NYTimes bestselling academic AJ
Hartley in a powerful collaboration with top government officials that
keep the truth on course while revealing fascinating secrets surrounding
the true, well-documented events of Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon.
The 2017 trade paperback edition includes a foreword by Jim Semivan, a
retired 25-year career veteran of the Central Intelligence Agency's
National Clandestine Service.
For those who know...
that something is going on...
The witnesses are legion, scattered across the world and dotted through
history, people who looked up and saw something impossible lighting up
the night sky. What those objects were, where they came from, and
who--or what--might be inside them is the subject of fierce debate and
equally fierce mockery, so that most who glimpsed them came to wish they
hadn't.
Most, but not everyone.
Among those who know what they've seen, and--like the toll of a bell
that can't be unrung--are forever changed by it, are a pilot, an
heiress, a journalist, and a prisoner of war. From the waning days of
the 20th century's final great war to the fraught fields of Afghanistan
to the otherworldly secrets hidden amid Nevada's dusty neverlands--the
truth that is out there will propel each of them into a labyrinth of
otherworldly technology and the competing aims of those who might seek
to prevent--or harness--these beings of unfathomable power. Because, as
it turns out, we are not the only ones who can invent and build...and
destroy.
Featuring actual events and other truths drawn from sources within the
military and intelligence community, Tom DeLonge and A.J. Hartley offer
a tale at once terrifying, fantastical, and perhaps all too real. Though
it is, of course, a work of... fiction?