There was a lot going for this YA dystopian urban fantasy novel that I liked: a grim future with loss of freedom, a society divided between ordinary humans and the select few that develop a special psychic ability called Talent and a military theme where the unwitting hero is forced to engage in war with an enemy city ironically called Liberty.
The story begins on a strong note. Eighteen year old Jayden is growing fed up living with his uptight uncle who has seemingly always worked in the military and treats him with disdain at best due to his laziness and lack of initiative. Indeed, Jayden seems to be vastly pretentious always badmouthing his uncle that never beat him even though he himself grew up with an abusive father and never doing even simple house chores. Heck, Jayden admits that his uncle lives in a nice house in the best part of Locke's Coalition, a sort of fortified city that is better off than other regions of the world but he still seems to whine a lot.
And then after he accompanies his best friend Ben outside of the safety of the city walls to wander in the forest, we start to see glimpses of his persona. Bullied relentlessly as a child for no apparent reason, Jayden develops incessant anger issues that prevails (ruining) the entire novel. He lets his emotions and feelings of insecurity make him make bad decisions. If lashing out on everyone wasn't annoying enough, the way he hounds after women acting clingy to the degree of being incapable of functioning *during* a super important espionage military mission seems to be inconcievable. You'd think Jayden is a heavily insecure 13 year old kid with all of his emotional issues.
Did I just hear Jayden is on a super important military mission despite his baggage? I still have a hard time believing they'd release Jayden's tether without addressing his most pressing emotional issues and along the way risk the life of a talented and overall decent person named Lilly. Jayden finally grows fed up with his uncle and tosses him across the living room.
His life is over.
After fleeing his home and taking refuge with Ben's family, he confesses that his recent spat of anger has just awakened latent telekinesis. Ben seems incredulous until Jayden lifts a rock surrounding it with green aura. Realizing that telekinesis is the only known ability that emits a colored aura and with talent searching day approaching, Jayden becomes horrified that his birth city is going to force him to become a soldier against his will and force him to kill people without flinching. Ben seems reassuring that military life isn't that bad and that everyone including his former bullies will respect him.
Jayden suddenly swishes all over the place and starts to think being powerful is all cool and stuff... until he is caught using telekinesis on a few bullies and ratted off to the police. The book seems to have a lot of plot holes and inconsistencies that got a lot on my nerves. Jayden ends up in prison and a kangaroo trial will certainly give him a life sentence in a maxinum security penitentiary. Just in the last minute, a soldier shows up and liberates him on the condition that he joins the forces.
He then shows up to the (previously mentioned to be obligatory) selection ceremony and any mentioning of his arrest lay forgotten. The book could have skipped those scenes and it would have never altered the course of the story. Jayden could have also skipped the part where he's flirting with a healer.
After discovering his already very rare ability is predicted to be absurdly powerful if he trains appropiately, Jayden spends 90% of his training time either whining that he only wants a boring desk job and harassing poor Lilly, pretty much demanding her to marry him on the spot. His overt stalking becomes disturbing real quick. Much to his chagrin, an annoying and self-righteous geek named Sid is also a vastly powerful telekinetic and they end up quarreling in the training field for no apparent reason.
Without being fully trained and definitely too emotionally immature for his good, Jayden and Lilly are forced to team up and infiltrate Liberty city to damage some military posts in the hopes the army can someday storm into the city and defeat the tyrant Archduke Goldwater.
I really think the book had a lot of things going for it. I liked the initial plot setting where in this world, the few with special psychic powers are reveled and conscripted into the military. The main issues involve Jayden's annoying personality traits, the way he views and treats women, his incessant wussiness and then some other things in the book. Stilted dialogue that becomes overtly corny at times, unidimensional bully characters, plot holes and deficient worldbuilding to name a few. The book references that knowledge of technology has been lost with the prior wars but the book doesn't really mention to what degree. Cars and other vehicles seem to no longer exist and everyone uses bikes or walk. Nobody owns horses. And yet newspapers and radios exist. We don't know how people cook their meals, just that food is rationed and civilians are highly patriotic.
It seemed to me that the book was too busy focusing itself on bullying and hounding women.
If there was one part of the book that really compelled me, it's the chapters of Jayden's imprisonment halfway into the book. I enjoy reading prison chapters a lot and the author does a marvelous job describing Jayden's agony during his torture, his failed suicide attempt and the harsher treatment that followed and his desperation when he realized nobody was going to rescue him. Jayden stopped acting like a whiny teenager and more of a matured character that was easier to root for. Those chapters were a bright light into an otherwise faulty story. Good enough to give the book 2 1/2 stars.