Tag, You’re Dead Audiobook
Tag, You’re Dead Audiobook
- Erin Spencer
- Blackstone Audiobooks
- 2016-07-05
- 8 h 45 min
Summary:
Six young people play a dangerous video game of tag in public areas, chasing each other through the crowds, roads, and structures of Chicago. This magic formula, one-of-a-kind, wildly expensive game gives a macabre twist towards the youth version: in the event that you get tagged, you expire.
Three “Its” possess their known reasons for buying a put in place the overall game. Surgically enhanced Brandy is enthusiastic about destroying a naturally beautiful woman. Untalented Robert covets his target’s position as superstar of the basketball group. Brainiac about Label, You’re Dead Charles craves a fight against an intellectual similar. Given their elite social position, they reject any feasible downside to the contest. Each needs the satisfaction of killing their prey, then walking away.
Handpicked innocents perform as “Runners,” under threat to their loved ones as long as they won’t participate: lovely, small-town Laura; celebrated athlete Tyrese; and Amanda, gamer extraordinaire. By itself, hunted by their adversary, each feels an individual hope: to survive.
Technological wizardry controls the game. When Runners have the “Move” signal on smartwatches locked with their wrists, the game rockets them through the town, from the El to Michigan Avenue to the Lincoln Recreation area Zoo. There is absolutely no time to rest. Every thirty minutes the Runner’s area is transmitted, continuously diminishing the Runner’s potential for ever reaching house base alive.
The game will not end until someone is tagged, so the Runners must choose how exactly to play. Will they accept loss of life? Can they murder their “Its?” Or will they discover a way to make use of their individual strengths to stop the game before anyone dies?”A well-constructed crossbreed of Richard Connell’s 1920s brief story PROBABLY THE MOST Dangerous Video game (in which people hunt humans for sport), Stephen King’s The Working Man (having a murderous video game), and, of course, The Hunger Video games, but Street includes enough original material to help make the tale feel fresh…Good reading for King fans aswell as those many millions who secretly wish that Katniss Everdeen was even now playing her personal harmful game.”-Booklist