Chased by danger and gifted with the ability to teleport, a teenager discovers the world is both wider and more perilous than he ever imagined. From secret hideaways to high-stakes pursuits, every jump raises the stakes. Jumper blends breathless adventure with a sharp coming-of-age pulse that keeps you turning pages.
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If the thrill of Davy Rice using a single, astonishing ability to rebuild his life—jumping from an abusive home into bank vaults and safe apartments, figuring out limits and rules—hooked you, you’ll love how Teagan Frost tackles Los Angeles with nothing but telekinesis, grit, and a day job that keeps her under government scrutiny. Like Davy dodging his NSA pursuers and crafting a code for when to use his gift, Teagan has to balance secrecy, responsibility, and split-second escapes in a world that otherwise runs by normal rules.
You watched Davy draw the line on when to "jump"—robbing banks to survive, yes; harming innocents, no—and wrestle with what he owes Millie and the people who want to control him. In Vicious, two former friends discover how to create superpowers and spiral into a deadly feud over what responsibility power demands. If Davy’s cat-and-mouse with government handlers and his self-made rules intrigued you, Victor and Eli’s escalating tests of conscience will scratch the same itch, turning ethical dilemmas into razor‑taut suspense.
If you connected with Davy’s teen voice—escaping his father, testing the edges of his teleportation, falling for Millie while constantly looking over his shoulder—you’ll click with John Smith. He’s hiding in small-town America, learning to control his emerging abilities while assassins close in, and trying to have a normal relationship that keeps getting upended by the life he didn’t choose. That blend of growth, romance, and relentless pursuit that made Jumper so propulsive is front and center here.
Part of what makes Jumper sing is living inside Davy’s head—his jump-by-jump problem solving, his fear when the net tightens, and the raw honesty of his bond with Millie. The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August gives that same intimate, confessional pull: Harry narrates directly as he relives his life over and over, discovering others like him and facing a threat only someone with his gift can stop. If you loved Davy’s firsthand, no‑nonsense voice, Harry’s will grip you just as tightly.
If the sheer momentum of Davy’s story—bank heists, improvised getaways, and the escalating stakes once the government catches wind of his jumps—kept you turning pages, The Fold takes that speed and welds it to a teleportation experiment with secrets inside secrets. As the investigation peels back what the device really does, the tension spikes in the same way Davy’s life detonates after he pushes his ability too far. It’s the punchy, breathless ride you loved, now with a mind‑bending twist on teleportation.
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