Grant Cameron's book-length argument that UFO disclosure has not unfolded as a single sudden revelation but as a managed process shaped by selective leaks, cultural conditioning, and shifting official messaging. Rather than concentrating on one sighting case, the book looks at patterns in how the subject has been introduced to the public over time and how expectations about secrecy and disclosure have been organized. Released in 2016, it fits squarely into the Atlas's disclosure-analysis category and is often cited in conversations about narrative management rather than direct evidence. Its main value here is interpretive: it offers a framework for understanding the politics of when, how, and by whom UAP information reaches the public.