The more you delve into the circumstances, facts, evidence, and documents describing the tragedy of a group of tourists led by Igor Dyatlov in February 1959, the sharper the feeling: you’re looking at a story that was invented—only by whom?
Precisely thought out down to the smallest detail.
A detective story, gripping.
With every fact comes a riddle. With every detail, confusion.
A story that stirs the imagination. In it lies a painful intrigue, a terrible secret. It teases and knocks you into logical traps.
The longer you get tangled in the twists of events and the braid of facts, the research and investigations of the tragedy, the versions and guesses, the farther you drift from reality. And soon you can no longer tell truth from fiction, and fiction from a calculating fantasy.
We’re dealing with a puzzle—one that anyone who hears about it will be eager and stubborn to solve. This book will help the reader get closer to the answer—or even propose an irresistible version of why the events on the pass unfolded exactly this way.