The Signal: A Conspiratorium Novel
The Redacted Series, Book 2
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
Obtén 3 meses por US$0.99 al mes
Exclusivo para miembros Prime: ¿Nuevo en Audible? Obtén 2 audiolibros gratis con tu prueba.
Compra ahora por $6.95
-
Narrado por:
-
Ciara Armstrong
-
De:
-
Linda Sanchez
The broadcast isn’t over. It’s just beginning.Juno Voss has spent years chasing dead frequencies—cassette tapes filled with static, half-buried transmissions, and voices that don’t belong to her. But when one recording speaks in her own voice—words she has never said—she’s pulled back into a conspiracy that was never meant to resurface.
Her sister is alive. Or trapped. Or both.
The Vault is no longer a rumor—it’s bleeding into reality.
And the Signal isn’t content to be heard anymore.
It wants to be remembered.
As cities collapse under mysterious broadcasts and memories turn into weapons, Juno finds herself hunted by shadow networks, underground archivists, and the Cathedral. This cult-like empire turns belief itself into a transmitter. Everyone insists she’s not just listening to the Signal. She’s carrying it.
To survive, Juno must untangle what is a message and what is manipulation, who to trust, and who is already infected. Because the closer she gets to the truth, the more one fact becomes undeniable:
She’s no longer decoding the broadcast.
She is the broadcast.
©2025 Legacy & Light Publishing (P)2026 Legacy & Light PublishingEl oyente recibió este título gratis
From the opening pages, the concept of The Signal feels less like a sci-fi device and more like a warning. Dead frequencies, corrupted memories, voices that shouldn’t exist—this is psychological suspense layered with dystopian paranoia, and it’s executed with precision.
Juno Voss is a compelling protagonist because she isn’t heroic in a traditional sense. She’s observant, fractured, skeptical—and increasingly unreliable, not because she’s weak, but because the world around her is rewriting reality in real time. The idea that belief itself can be weaponized, transmitted, and engineered feels disturbingly plausible in today’s media-saturated culture.
What really sets this book apart is its restraint. The story trusts the reader. It doesn’t overexplain. It lets unease build slowly, like static creeping into a clean signal. The Cathedral, the Vault, the broadcasts—they linger in your mind long after you stop reading.
By the time the line “She is the broadcast” lands, it’s not a twist—it’s an inevitability.
If you enjoy cerebral thrillers, analogue horror, memory-based sci-fi, or stories that question how much of what we believe is truly our own, this book delivers. It’s haunting, smart, and quietly brutal.
Highly recommended for readers who like their fiction to leave a mark
Unsettling and Intelligent
Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.