Optional: When Justice Was Optional Audiolibro Por B Alan Bourgeois arte de portada

Optional: When Justice Was Optional

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Optional: When Justice Was Optional

De: B Alan Bourgeois
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
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A nationwide “fragrance test” sells consent as a shield—until a Saturday video turns a glossy gig into a mass casualty mystery and proves some grief was engineered.

On a bright Friday in downtown Dallas, influencer Mara Quinn is paid to do what she does best: charm strangers, ask permission, and capture the moment. “Totally optional,” she says, again and again—on buses, at stops, across America—while a sleek flyer and a QR code sell the illusion of a legitimate launch.

By Saturday morning, the country is spiraling. A confession video drops. Hospitals flood. Wild estimates explode across screens. And a New York marketing firm discovers the unthinkable: the “client” they met on Zoom wasn’t a brand rep—he was a weapon.

As scapegoats are chosen and the internet demands blood, a transit driver recognizes a familiar face on the news… and breaks. Mara’s clip goes viral beside a victim’s obituary photo, and a family’s grief forces her to confront what her hunger really cost.

Then the underling learns the most brutal truth of all: he was never meant to survive Phase One.

BOOK REVIEW:

Optional is a contemporary thriller that turns a familiar modern nuisance—street “sampling” and influencer hustle—into a national-scale crisis. When hospitals begin reporting clusters of respiratory distress, confusion, and seizures, a repeating detail emerges: multiple patients mention being “sprayed” with a fragrance sample at transit stops. The story’s early tension comes from how it mirrors real response work—uncertain data, cautious language, and the pressure to act without igniting panic.

A major thread follows Mara, a Dallas influencer hired to run the campaign, who believes she’s doing a legitimate promo built on the comforting language of consent: “totally optional.” As the fallout spreads, the book examines how attention economies train people to treat strangers as content—and how “permission” can be engineered through tone, optics, and social pressure. Other perspectives widen the lens to show institutional triage, public rumor cascades, and families forced to watch grief become entertainment.

The prose is lean and propulsive, and the structure—multiple viewpoints across cities and roles—builds a layered picture of complicity and consequence without relying on gore or spectacle. The result is tense, timely, and morally sharp. Readers who enjoy modern civic thrillers, procedural momentum, and stories about manipulation in the age of virality will find Optional gripping. Readers looking for light escapism or neat catharsis may find it uncomfortably realistic.

Género Ficción Médico Médico y Forense Psicológico Thriller y Suspenso
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