Some places don't disappear.They simply fall out of step.The Town That Missed a Century explores how communities are quietly erased - not by disaster or abandonment, but by planning decisions, shifting systems, and reasonable choices made elsewhere. Focusing on a small coastal town that remained functional while the modern world reorganized around it, this book traces how misalignment can accumulate without ever looking like failure.Moving beyond ruins and nostalgia, it examines what happens when places adapt successfully to neglect - and how that very adaptability can make them easy to overlook. Roads that never arrived. Infrastructure that bypassed rather than broke. Lives recalibrated around absence long before anyone called it loss.This is not a book about collapse.It is a book about continuity - and how persistence is often mistaken for stagnation.Written with clarity and restraint, The Town That Missed a Century is narrative nonfiction for readers interested in geography, history, urban change, and the ethics of attention. It asks not how to save every place, but how many places we fail to notice precisely because they continue.