TAKEN ALIVE
A True Documented Terror — The Pascagoula Abduction (1973)
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Ted Lazaris
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
EDITORIAL REVIEW
TAKEN ALIVE — A True Documented Terror — The Pascagoula Abduction (1973) is a chilling, slow-burn descent into psychological containment horror, told through the eyes of the men who believed they were examined while fully conscious. Blending small-town realism with escalating, undeniable anomalies, Ted Lazaris crafts a relentless atmosphere where the terror is not what arrives—but what quietly finishes its work. The result is a cold, unforgettable final act that leaves readers questioning whether the town was protected… or permanently recalibrated.
TAKEN ALIVE
A True Documented Terror — The Pascagoula Abduction (1973)
“They were awake the whole time.”
October 1973. Pascagoula, Mississippi.
Two shipyard men finish a late shift and walk down to the riverbank to unwind. The air is thick with salt and diesel. The water is black. The night is ordinary.
Until it isn’t.
A sound comes first — not mechanical, not animal — something wet and dragging through the dark. Then a light that does not shine so much as press. The trees do not move. The river does not ripple. And the men realize, too late, that whatever stands near the shoreline is not approaching.
It is already there.
They are lifted without hands. Held without touch. Carried into a space that does not feel built — only arranged. They are not strapped down. They are not anesthetized.
They are awake.
What examines them does not speak. It does not blink. It does not breathe. It moves with surgical indifference, not cruelty. There is no anger in it. No curiosity. Only procedure.
When the men are returned to the riverbank, they are left standing where they began — but nothing inside them is standing the same.
The police tape recorder clicks on.
Small-town officers exchange skeptical looks.
Vietnam-era America does not have language for what these men are describing.
And yet the fear in their voices is not theatrical. It is not imaginative. It is not seeking attention.
It is the fear of men who know they were handled.
As ridicule spreads and the official record narrows, something far worse begins: memory distortion, physical panic, shadows that hesitate before following, the sensation of being measured long after the river has gone quiet.
One man wants to forget.
The other knows forgetting is impossible.
Because the most disturbing truth is not what came out of the dark.
It is what the dark left behind.
TAKEN ALIVE is a relentless work of Documented Terror rooted in the real Pascagoula Abduction of 1973 — a Southern working-class nightmare told through the eyes of the men who believed they were examined by something not human.
No folklore.
No mythology.
No easy explanation.
Only the river.
Only the tape recorder.
And the knowledge that they were conscious the entire time.