Recorded, Then Gone Audiobook By G.J Fene cover art

Recorded, Then Gone

Virtual Voice Sample

Audible Standard 30-day free trial

Try Standard free
Select 1 audiobook a month from our entire collection of titles.
Yours as long as you’re a member.
Get unlimited access to bingeable podcasts.
Standard auto renews for $8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Recorded, Then Gone

By: G.J Fene
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
Try Standard free

$8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $4.99

Buy for $4.99

Background images

This title uses virtual voice narration

Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.

In courtrooms, clerk offices, inspection units, and government mailrooms across the country, disappearance rarely arrives with sirens. It arrives on paper.

Filed Without Return is a haunting true-crime compilation drawn from publicly accessible case files, records requests, inspection logs, and administrative paperwork, documents designed to track lives, yet often the first to reveal when a person quietly vanishes.

Each story is told in first-person by the people who handled the paper: a courthouse mailroom supervisor sorting returned jury summonses, a contractor bidding a renovation that never begins, a records officer responding to a missing FOIA file, a disaster-relief caseworker watching an uncashed check expire, an auction bidder inheriting a home still full of belongings, a county registrar filing an unused marriage license, a junior inspector reinspecting an apartment for someone who never comes back.

No detectives. No confessions. No neat endings.

What remains are paper trails that outlast bodies, procedures that continue without witnesses, and systems that do exactly what they were designed to do, even when the person they were meant to protect is already gone.

Written in a restrained, conversational style and grounded in real public-record processes, Filed Without Return explores the unsettling space where law, bureaucracy, and absence overlap, where disappearance doesn’t look like a crime, and no one is officially missing.

Because sometimes, the last place a person exists is in a file that never gets closed.

Anthologies Anthologies & Short Stories Biographies & Memoirs True Crime
No reviews yet