Oliver, Ben. The Loop. Chicken House, 2020.
The Third World War, also known as “Futile War”, ended with the dropping of twenty-nine nuclear bombs and the deaths of nine-hundred million civilians. Even more people died afterwards when the temperature of the Earth dropped. A coalition of rebels from both sides of every country ended the war, but it was billionaires who caused it in order to stay rich and in power. This resulted in only one governing system called The World Government and the birth of Happy, their computer operating system, which controls life all over the globe. Citizens are divided by caste, with the Elite being the highest.
Sixteen-year-old Luka “Luke” Kane is living in The Loop, a death row prison for teens, for a crime he did not commit. Life in The Loop is no picnic; inmates are in solitary confinement and get only one hour of exercise per day. Their energy is harvested nightly in order to power the prison, and they receive chemical-laced showers immediately afterward. Prisoners can extend their lives every six months by agreeing to Delays, scientific experiments which benefit the Elite of society. The only pleasure Luke receives is reading books brought to him by the Warden of the prison.
After a cataclysmic event, Luke and some of his friends are able to escape from The Loop. However, they discover that the outside world is even more dangerous than inside the prison. Citizens have become vicious and are maiming and killing each other. The former prisoners must defend themselves, run for their lives, and avoid being captured.
This debut novel, the first in a planned series, by Ben Oliver is a terrifying journey into a dystopian society created out of a planned, devastating war. The world that the author has created, both inside and outside of the prison, is both eye-opening and terrifying. The prisoners are treated brutally, and the caste system is set up to be mandatory and discriminatory. The book is packed with gripping action and surprises.
Billed as a “mashup of The Matrix and The Maze Runner”, this class-warfare novel is a political and social commentary on what might happen to our world if these events were to become reality. There is an ethnically diverse group of characters which are well-developed and fleshed-out. The futuristic world-building is well-thought out and presented.
The Loop is the first in a planned trilogy by this Scottish author. Hand it to fans who enjoy dystopian and science fiction novels. I recommend it for upper middle school, high school, and public libraries and give it four out of five stars!
Thank you to Edelweiss and Chicken House for allowing me to read and review this book.
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