The Invisible People
JeremiahMoon
あらすじ
The Invisible People is a cerebral, genre-bending psychological sci-fi thriller exploring memory manipulation, identity fragmentation, and society's quiet erasure of the marginalized. In a city where the homeless are vanishing-only to return as polished, flawless versions of themselves-former investigative journalist Ava Chen becomes the only one who notices the world is being rewritten. When a mysterious notebook appears and begins predicting glitch-like events in her life, Ava finds herself caught in a war between shadow operatives, unstable timelines, and mirror versions of herself. As Ava digs deeper, she uncovers a secret program known as Equinox-a quantum memory experiment tied to social engineering and human consciousness. The more she uncovers, the more unstable her reality becomes. Her friends don't remember what they should. Her memories fracture. Reflections don't sync. And the deeper truth emerges: this isn't just about her-it's about all of us. Driven by themes of quantum identity, technological overreach, and forgotten people in plain sight, The Invisible People combines the speculative ambition of Black Mirror and Dark with the emotional resonance of The Silent Patient. The novel questions who gets to shape reality, and whether identity is something we own-or something that can be overwritten. This is Book One of The Invisible People series, laying the groundwork for a larger exploration into "Quantum Seed Theory," a fictional but deeply researched world-building concept that connects memory, entanglement, and identity drift across timelines. Ideal for fans of: Psychological thrillers with sci-fi elements Multiverse fiction grounded in emotional realism Dystopian narratives with philosophical and social commentary Stories like Severance, The OA, or The Man in the High Castle For readers who enjoy high-concept fiction that lingers long after the last page, The Invisible People offers a gripping descent into the self-and what happens when the world forgets who you were meant to be.