Every Delay Means A Life
All Four Endings
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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B Alan Bourgeois
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
EVERY DELAY MEANS A LIFE
A 4-ending series
Same story. Same stakes. Four different endings.
Tom Grady is a retired Army veteran sleeping in his car—unseen by the city’s “counts,” and one tow away from losing the last thing that still feels like home. When he demands a simple, humane policy—safe parking where people won’t be criminalized for closing their eyes—he’s shoved into the city’s favorite weapons: boilerplate empathy, “partner agencies,” liability talk, and endless waiting.
But Tom doesn’t stay invisible. He steps up at a City Hall testimony night and forces the room to hear what the system keeps pretending is “theory”: real bodies, real exhaustion, real danger—right now.
This series does something rare: it doesn’t give you just one conclusion. It gives you four. Book 1, Book 2, Book 3, and Book 4 each deliver a distinct final outcome—because in real life, the ending depends on what happens next: who shows up, what breaks, what changes, and what doesn’t.
Written from lived experience—the author was homeless while writing it—this is a tense, human, unflinching story about how quickly a bureaucracy can become lethal… and what happens when one man decides to make the city count its ghosts.
And this isn’t just storytelling. Buying each book helps raise funds for homeless charities. Every purchase turns attention into impact—supporting people who are living this crisis right now.
Start with Book 1… then experience all four endings.
Because every delay means a life. And every book can help.
BOOK REVIEW:
Every Delay Means a Life is a four-edition novel built on a bold premise: the story remains the same, but the ending changes—four different conclusions that test four different truths about survival, policy, and the cost of waiting. The narrative follows Tom Grady, a homeless veteran living out of his car, fighting for a safe-parking solution that’s designed to be boring, quiet, and functional—sleep without spectacle. The city, meanwhile, speaks its favorite dialect: liability, committees, revisions, “pilot programs,” and the kind of language that sounds responsible while postponing responsibility.
The book’s power comes from its precision. Bureaucracy isn’t treated as abstract frustration; it’s rendered as a force that reshapes nights, bodies, and choices. Tom’s persistence is portrayed as brave but not glamorous—measured, exhausted, and sometimes razor-edged. The prose is grounded and controlled, with a steady build that makes small acts of decency feel enormous because the system around them is so practiced at deflection.
The four endings deepen the book’s themes rather than diluting them. Each conclusion reframes the same struggle through a different tonal and moral outcome—forward motion, public reckoning, hard personal rebuilding, and the fragility of progress under backlash—without turning any version into a neat “lesson.” Readers drawn to character-driven social issue fiction with thriller-level tension will likely find this series gripping, urgent, and uncomfortably credible. - True Voice Review