Where People Go Missing
Across the world, there are landscapes where people vanish at rates that defy logic-forests where scent trails end mid-path, deserts where footprints stop in open sand, oceans where ships disappear without wreckage, mountains where climbers vanish in clear weather, and plains where travelers walk away from their vehicles and are never seen again.
These are not rare, isolated tragedies. They form a pattern that stretches across continents, cultures, and centuries. The details change, but the outcome remains the same. A person is present one moment, and the next, they are not. No screams. No warning. No visible cause.
These are not war zones.
They are not disaster sites.
They are not places marked on warning signs.
They are ordinary locations that behave extraordinarily.
They are forests families picnic in.
Mountains tourists photograph.
Roads commuters travel.
Waters fishermen cross every day.
Nothing about them looks dangerous. Nothing about them feels forbidden. Yet again and again, people enter these spaces and fail to return, leaving behind scenes that feel staged, deliberate, and wrong.
The stories inside this book are not urban legends. They are drawn from search-and-rescue records, historical documents, police reports, eyewitness testimony, and survivor accounts. Some are over a hundred years old. Others happened only months ago. Together, they form a map of places where reality seems to misbehave.
And when these cases are placed side by side, they reveal the same chilling pattern:
People step into these places.
The environment shifts.
And then... they are gone.
Not lost.
Not found.
Just gone.