INVISIBLE QUARTET
Zya was born in South-West, one of the nine segments of England. She’s disabled and has always been readying herself for the fact that she will probably end up in Further Training, where mostly disabled people go when they fail the Exit Exam.
Jonah was born in North-West, completely healthy and living his life without much thought to what would come after schooling. He’s had some thoughts about the future after he passes the Exit Exam, but nothing major.
The two have never met, and never would have, had their segments not been attacked, bombs dropped, a virus released, and everything changed. Zya wasn’t impacted, Jonah was, as was every other non-disabled survivor.
Now the two have to find a way to save not just themselves, but their friends, and everyone else.
This series is four books, with the third coming in 2026
Young Adult Dystopian
👩🏻🦽 disabled protagonist
🫥 invisible disabilities
♿️ visible disabilities
🦠 unknown virus
🏳️🌈 queer rep
🌍 dystopian world
☠️ fighting to survive
Zya is ready for her Exit Exam, knowing that she will, most likely, end up being sent to Further Training due to her disabilities. She doesn’t know what that entails, but she’ll do her best to make sure it never happens.
Jonah is more concerned with focusing on his future and what he wants to do after the Exit Exam. Having grown up completely abled, he has no fears of Further Training.
Two different people, two different segments. The only thing that joins them is the air raid that comes from nowhere. A virus that kills many and disables the rest.
And the rest of the world is silent. What happens to segment life when the segment falls apart?
Zya had no choice but to agree to leave the segment and make the trek to the central hub along with a few friends and four adults, any one of them might be a terrorist ready to release a second virus.
Her job is to make sure the terrorist is found, and killed, but Zya’s hand She has no choice if she wants to save her friends and survive this nightmare.
Jonah and his friends escaped the segment barely. They’re facing a journey to the central hub to try and demand change.
And they’re all learning that life outside the segments is nothing like they thought, people thriving in communities and both parties are walking around with targets on their backs.
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