Sekret Machines: Chasing Shadows by Tom DeLonge & Peter Levenda — Review

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Sekret Machines Chasing Shadows by Tom DeLonge and Peter Levenda book cover

Author Tom DeLonge & Peter Levenda
Publisher To The Stars
Published 2016
Narrator Check Audible listing
Rating ★★★★

🛒 Buy on Amazon
🎧 Listen on Audible

It’s easy to dismiss a book co-written by the former frontman of Blink-182. That’s probably the point. Chasing Shadows is the opening chapter of what Tom DeLonge and Peter Levenda describe as a “full scope narrative” — a project that blurs fiction and documented fact to reveal, they claim, truths that couldn’t be told any other way. Whether you buy that framing or not, the book is more substantial than its origin story suggests.


What It Covers

Sekret Machines: Chasing Shadows (2016) is the first installment in a dual fiction/nonfiction series. The novel follows multiple protagonists — a test pilot, a journalist, a military officer — whose stories converge around UAP-related events. Levenda’s literary craft is evident throughout; the writing is considerably more polished than most UAP-adjacent fiction.

Thematically, the book draws on:

  • Crash retrieval programs and black-budget aerospace projects
  • The role of private contractors in UAP reverse-engineering efforts
  • Government compartmentalization and the limits of what elected officials actually know
  • The long historical arc of the UAP phenomenon, reaching back beyond the modern era

Why It Matters

The Sekret Machines project is notable for one specific reason: DeLonge demonstrably had access to high-level insiders, as confirmed by the Podesta emails released during the 2016 election cycle and by the eventual formation of To The Stars Academy with figures like former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Chris Mellon and former AATIP director Luis Elizondo. Whether the fictional frame contains genuine insider intelligence or is creative extrapolation remains genuinely unclear — which is either the book’s greatest strength or its most significant problem, depending on your tolerance for ambiguity.


Closing Recommendation

Who should listen: Readers who enjoy narrative-driven UAP content and are comfortable with the fiction/nonfiction ambiguity. Also valuable for those tracking the To The Stars ecosystem and DeLonge’s insider connections.

Who can skip it: Readers who want straight documentation. The fictional frame will frustrate you.

Bottom line: More credible than it looks on the surface, more speculative than it claims to be. Approach with curiosity and healthy skepticism.

🎧 Listen on Audible   🛒 Buy on Amazon

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