THE FAR SIDE Audiobook By Ted Lazaris cover art

THE FAR SIDE

A Documented Horror Inspired by Canceled Lunar Missions and Unexplained Anomalies

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THE FAR SIDE

By: Ted Lazaris
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Editorial Review

The Far Side is a restrained, devastating work of documented horror that transforms decades of lunar anomalies, canceled Apollo missions, and whispered cover-ups into something far more unsettling than conspiracy: consequence. Told with clinical precision and quiet humanity, the novel follows what happens when a system designed to erase evidence fails to erase a person. Ted Lazaris refuses spectacle or explanation, delivering literal, on-page terror through bodily harm, memory loss, and irreversible human cost. The result is a chilling, cinematic record that lingers not because it answers questions—but because it proves some damage cannot be corrected once witnessed.



THE FAR SIDE
A Documented Horror Inspired by Canceled Lunar Missions and Unexplained Anomalies
Officially, nothing was there. The data did not agree.

Official records say the mission never flew.

Its designation was erased.
Its objectives were reassigned.
Its data was buried under layers of silence and misdirection.

But fragments remain.

Telemetry that contradicts itself.
Seismic readings that refuse to behave like geology.
Visual records from the Moon’s far side that cannot be reconciled with terrain—or shadow.

When a classified crew is sent to verify what should not exist, they do not find ruins, messages, or answers. They find something far worse: a presence that does not react, does not communicate, and does not need to hide.

The Moon does not attack.
It does not pursue.
It allows.

As instruments fail and perception fractures, the crew realizes the mission was never about discovery. It was about proximity—and how close a human mind can get to something it was never meant to comprehend before it breaks.

Nothing about the anomaly is violent.

The violence comes later.

And once contact is made, there is no procedure, no protocol, and no distance great enough to undo it.

Officially, nothing was there. The data did not agree.

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