Nov 17, 2010

Book Review: The End of Marking Time by C.J. West

Title: The End of Marking Time
Author: C. J. West
Paperback: 284 pages
Publisher: 22 West Books (May 22, 2010)
Source: Review copy provided by the author
Genre: Sci-fi, dystopia

Product description: Gifted housebreaker, Michael O'Connor, awakens inside an ultramodern criminal justice system where prison walls are replaced by surveillance equipment and a host of actors hired to determine if he is worthy of freedom. While he was sleeping, the Supreme Court declared long term incarceration to be cruel and unusual punishment and ordered two million felons released. The result was utter chaos and the backlash from law-abiding citizens and police departments reshaped the United States. Felons now enter reeducation programs where they live freely among the population. At least that's what they think. In reality they are enslaved to an army of counselors and a black box that teaches them everything they failed to learn from kindergarten through adulthood. Michael believes he's being tested by the black box, but what he slowly begins to realize is that everything he does is evaluated to determine whether he lives or dies. (amazon)

My comments: I expected a traditional thriller and was surprised by a dystopian futuristic novel in which felons are controlled and watched to an extreme degree by the government. The plan for rehabilitation and training sounds like a good one, but the punishment for failure to comply with the rules are pretty harsh. Be prepared for a surprise ending in this very unusual and inventive novel, as you follow the very human Michael trying to survive the minefield process of being turned into a model citizen.

Objective rating: 4 out of 5 for inventive plot and characterization.

4 comments:

  1. This does indeed sound very fresh and inventive!!

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  2. Not my cup of tea, I think. But does sound like a good one, for fans of this genre.

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  3. Harvee,

    Thanks for reading. I'm glad you enjoyed the book and I appreciate you sharing your thoughts with your readers.

    Yes TEOMT is a bit off the beaten track. It might border on experimental. In the book Michael speaks to you as if you know who he is. I thought this was a unique way to tell this particular story and I enjoyed writing it this way.
    CJ

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  4. I never thought I would like dystopian stories until I read The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood. Now, I love a good dystopian novel -- thanks for putting this on the radar.

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I appreciate your comments and thoughts...

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