Some questions don't have answers. Some of them never will. These are the ones that refuse to let go.
On July 2, 1937, Amelia Earhart's voice crackled through a radio receiver - anxious, searching, running low on fuel - and then went silent forever. On March 8, 2014, a Boeing 777 carrying 239 people climbed into the night sky over Kuala Lumpur and vanished without a trace. In 1590, an English governor returned to the New World to find 115 colonists gone, a single cryptic word carved into a post, and no other explanation.
LOST is the definitive account of history's greatest unsolved disappearances - the cases that have consumed investigators, captivated the public, and refused to yield their secrets across decades and centuries.
Inside, investigative historian Eleanor Voss applies rigorous scrutiny to seventeen landmark cases:
- Amelia Earhart - What really happened in those final radio transmissions, and does Nikumaroro Island hold the answer?
- D.B. Cooper - The only unsolved air piracy in U.S. history. Who was he? Did he survive?
- Malaysia Airlines MH370 - What the Inmarsat data actually tells us, and why the most expensive search in aviation history found almost nothing
- The Lost Colony of Roanoke - Four centuries of investigation, one carved word, and a theory that changes everything
- The Maya Collapse - How one of the most sophisticated civilizations in history vanished from its cities in a single century
- The Voynich Manuscript - 170,000 characters in an unknown script. Genuine language, elaborate hoax, or something stranger?
- The Wow! Signal - 72 seconds of radio data that may be the most significant evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence ever recorded
Plus: Jimmy Hoffa, the Zodiac Killer, the Mary Celeste, the Bermuda Triangle myth exposed, the Princes in the Tower, Glenn Miller, and more.
LOST doesn't manufacture false certainty or traffic in conspiracy theories. It presents the evidence clearly, weighs the competing explanations honestly, and sits - without flinching - in the genuine uncertainty that the best investigations leave behind.
For readers of Erik Larson, Mary Roach, and David Grann. For anyone who has ever stared at a horizon and wondered about the ones who crossed it and never came back.