All right, I'm hooked. I've only read this book and HUNTERS of the MISSING 411 series, but I'll be picking up the rest.
This is another book of intriguing disappearances matching Paulides's 'profile points' which include: canines' failure to track the victims, bad weather inhibiting the search, the victim later being found in a previously searched area and/or near a waterbody, granite, or boulders, the victims missing clothes/shoes, the disappearance occurring in late afternoon, and the victim having some disability or underlying medical problem. If these points don't seem weird, well, maybe they're not, but the cases sure as heck are. For example:
Parents got a call 5 hrs after their kid went to bed that he's a hundred miles away. Supposedly, he hopped a train while sleep walking.
A young man was found dead of hypothermia up on a hill in the woods, after he called his mom for a ride from a gas station. His shoes were missing, but his socks were clean and there were no tracks in the snow indicating how he'd gotten there.
A young man with overnight supplies died from exposure a DAY after he went missing in NH, in July. And a fish and game Lt. walked by him 4x before he was found.
A 3yo girl survived 11 days alone in the Russian taiga without so much as a coat.
The author does a better job linking the cases and weaving an overall narrative in this book, compared to HUNTERS. I think the writing is better too.
I like how each case has the 'profile points' pertaining to it listed before the account. This makes it easier to see how often they really show up. The author has also noted for each case if the victim was a physicist, medical professional, or athlete, and if they had German ancestry, high intellect, or a strong religious affiliation. In Paulides's research people with these traits seem to disappear at higher rates.
The author also included tables at the end of the book displaying distances travelled and elevation gained by the victims, and disappearances by age, month, and year, among others. It's nice to see the data compiled like this.
This book stressed that while search and rescue grids are sized based on 95% of lost individuals of a given age, on a given terrain, being found x miles from the point last seen, there remains the other 5%, off the grid. Paulides's cases encompass that 5%, detailing incidents where individuals, especially young children, travelled distances far beyond what searchers thought they could. This really resonates with me because I have a toddler who just runs and runs. If she ever got away from me in the woods I just know she'd be in that 5%. While there's undeniably logic in casting a smaller net with finer mesh, this book makes one wonder what, if anything, can be done to catch those outliers before it's too late for them.