SIBERIAN INCIDENT
The 1989 Case Where Twenty-Three Soldiers Were Turned to Stone
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Ted Lazaris
This title uses virtual voice narration
EDITORIAL REVIEW
A chilling, intelligent work of existential horror, this novel transforms first contact into something far more disturbing than invasion — quiet correction. With disciplined restraint and relentless plausibility, it explores how humanity adapts not through resistance, but through acceptance. Unsettling, original, and impossible to shake, this is horror that lingers long after the final page.
SIBERIAN INCIDENT
The 1989 Case Where Twenty-Three Soldiers Were Turned to Stone
In the frozen wilderness of Siberia, a Soviet military unit was dispatched to investigate an unidentified aerial intrusion.
Only two soldiers returned.
What the survivors described was not combat.
It was contact.
According to a classified intelligence report—later declassified after the Cold War—three non-human entities emerged from a descending craft and emitted a concentrated beam of light. Within seconds, twenty-three armed soldiers were transformed into solid stone, frozen mid-motion, their faces locked in terror.
No burns.
No blast damage.
No known weapon signature.
Photographs document stone bodies still holding rifles.
Autopsy reports confirm cellular petrification.
Witness testimony describes the beam as intentional—selective, controlled, precise.
This book reconstructs the incident using documented military records, intelligence summaries, survivor accounts, and suppressed analysis. It does not speculate wildly. It presents what was written, what was observed, and what could not be explained.
There are no heroes here.
There is no victory.
Only proof that something watched, acted, and left—without resistance.
SIBERIAN INCIDENT is not science fiction.
It is terror rooted in documentation.
And once you see what was recorded, you’ll understand why it stayed buried for decades.
Some encounters don’t end in death.
They end in silence.