For decades, the UFO abduction phenomenon has lived in the most uncomfortable corner of modern history. Not quite accepted, never fully disproven, endlessly mocked, and quietly pushed outside the boundaries of respectable discussion. Lights in the sky became news. Military footage became congressional testimony. UAPs became a matter of national security. But the people at the center of the oldest and most disturbing claims, the men, women, and children who say they were taken, examined, returned, and left to live with impossible memories, were left behind.
The Taken brings them back into the room.
In this gripping investigative history, Colton Reiss traces the UFO abduction phenomenon from its earliest modern accounts to its place in the age of official UAP hearings, intelligence leaks, declassified programs, and renewed public fascination with the unexplained.
This is not a book of easy answers. It does not ask readers to believe everything. It does not pretend every claim is proof. Instead, it does something far more powerful: it takes the record seriously.
From the dark mountain road where Betty and Barney Hill lost two hours of their lives, to the Mississippi riverbank where two terrified shipyard workers were secretly recorded by a sheriff who expected to expose a hoax, to the Arizona forest where Travis Walton vanished for five days while his own crew was investigated for murder, The Taken examines the cases that shaped one of the strangest and most controversial subjects of the modern era.
But this book goes beyond the famous names.
It follows the deeper pattern: the bedroom paralysis at 3:14 a.m., the impossible scars, the missing time, the cold examination rooms, the children who drew the same dark-eyed figures, the experiencers who found one another only after years of silence, and the investigators, therapists, skeptics, journalists, and government officials who shaped the public meaning of what they reported.
Hypnosis, false memory, Cold War secrecy, military intelligence, pop culture ridicule, recovered testimony, and the rebranding of UFOs into UAPs all become part of a larger story about belief, fear, power, and the fragile line between experience and evidence.
This is a book about what happens when people report something too strange to be believed, but too consistent to be ignored.
It is also a book about silence.
The silence of witnesses who learned that coming forward could cost them their marriages, careers, reputations, and peace of mind. The silence created by jokes that turned alleged victims into punchlines. The silence left behind when mainstream culture decided that lights in the sky could be discussed, but the people who said they were taken could not.
For readers of serious UFO history, unexplained phenomena, government secrecy, alien contact, psychological mysteries, and cultural investigations, The Taken offers a chilling, deeply researched journey into one of the most disturbing questions of the modern age:
What if the most important part of the UFO story was not the craft in the sky, but the people who say the phenomenon came for them?
Whether you are a skeptic, a believer, or someone standing uneasily between the two, this book will pull you into the cold center of a mystery that has never fully gone away.
Because the reports did not stop.
The witnesses did not vanish.
And the silence surrounding them may be the most revealing evidence of all.