Why You'll Love This
Thirteen million people gone missing worldwide — and Jeremy Robinson has a theory that will make you uneasy long after the final page.
- Great if you want: UFO mythology treated with genuine seriousness and emotional weight
- The experience: fast and propulsive, with a paranoid undercurrent that builds steadily
- The writing: Robinson blends thriller mechanics with speculative ideas he clearly believes in
- Skip if: you want hard sci-fi logic over mythology and mystery
About This Book
When thirteen million people vanish without explanation over the course of decades, the world learns to look away. Dan Delgado hasn't. A former detective turned reluctant private investigator, he gets pulled into a missing persons case that refuses to follow any logic he's ever trusted — one that pushes him toward questions about UFOs, alien abduction, and the terrifying possibility that some disappearances are never meant to be solved. Jeremy Robinson grounds this story in genuine personal fascination with the subject, and the emotional stakes feel earned rather than manufactured. This isn't just a thriller about the unknown — it's about a man who still cares, even when caring costs him.
Robinson writes with velocity and precision, keeping the pages moving while quietly layering real grief and human texture beneath the science fiction surface. The Infinite series rewards readers who want their genre fiction to do more than one thing at once — to unsettle and to move in equal measure. The prose is clean, the pacing disciplined, and the central mystery expands in ways that feel genuinely surprising rather than arbitrary. It's the kind of book that makes you rethink what you thought you knew about a familiar subject.