Like so many of the books I enjoy the most, I found Intimate Alien merely by browsing shelves in the bookstore.
The UFO phenomenon, and its related conspiracy-theory literature, captured my attention just over ten years ago, in autumn 2012. The circumstances of my life, at the time I discovered and became fascinated with UFOs, resonate with Halperin's hypothesis in this book. That hypothesis, stated succinctly, is that the UFO experience and its mythology are essentially religious phenomena that address human beings' deepest anxieties and questions, primarily those surrounding the certainty of death.
This resonates with me not because I thought I would die in 2012, but because I was going through what--up until even now--was the most difficult, trying time of my life. Everything I'd taken for granted, as assumed, as given, came crashing down. The one thing I lacked in 2012 was certainty. In the midst of this uncertainty, about myself, my future, and my purpose, I discovered the UFO subculture as "accidently" as I discovered Halperin's book.
Like Halperin, I'm no longer a believer in UFOs, not in the colloquial sense, but I still believe that UFOs and the diverse stories surrounding them--like all stories--have meaning. I appreciate his courage and willingness to think critically and seriously about them, in an academic press no less!
I appreciate Halperin's tackling of the questions and ongoing fascination with UFOs in modern culture. Of course, his book was written and published well before the latest kerfuffle caused by the "admissions" about UFO's reality in the middle of the COVID shutdown. I'd be curious to know what he thinks of this latest iteration of the myth's advance. Or, perhaps, it's better to let this new chapter in the UFO story unfold and be left for others to interpret.