I’m actually a fan of Unbound Publishing. Normally I might be somewhat questioning the quality control of self (kinda sorta) published work, especially one supported by fans, I’ve had enough experience on GR alone with rabid fans of crappy authors and books, but…something about Unbound really works and well. The quality of their books is consistently on par with major publishers and this book is no exception. To be fair, I would have wanted to read it even if it didn’t come from Unbound, because I love, love, love a good dystopian story. And actually that’s what you get here…a good dystopian story. Maybe all the more so (major kudos to the author) by not taking the well trodden road of reproduction related situations and instead going straight for the bleak totalitarian sort of tale straight out of the much mentioned within the book Orwell. I mean, I read a lot of dystopias and can’t even think the last time a female author wrote one that didn’t have something to do with baby making. Which isn’t to say it isn’t an important subject, it is a huge important subject, especially in the present political climate. But books don’t seem to be having any effect there, are they? No matter how magnificent Atwood’s long awaited sequel might be or a myriad other books in the same vein, things seem only to be getting consistently crappier for women’s rights (at least in this new America made great), so why not have some reading variety at least. And anyway, this book takes place in Britain. Another country that used to be great. In this fictional near future military junta took over and instilled a brutal regime straight out of Stalin (or insert a socialist dictator of your choice) playbook. People are forced to live in fear and privation, their basic freedoms oppressed and basic rights denied. It is in this forbidding political climate that a college teacher, who father was disappeared by the government years ago, decides it’s time to make a difference by educating the young minds in her charge. She enlists the assistance of her partner, a fellow teacher, but whether for one or for two, the undertaking is still much too dangerous, especially when there is a renegade guerilla group making a stand of its own against the powers that be. And on top of it all, the man who arrested, disappeared and replaced father is no other than a Major within the Authorization Bureau and its most feared and brutal interrogator. So the entire time this daring act of defiance is as terrifying and claustrophobic and the world that inspired it. It creates for great dramatic suspense, the characters are interesting and well developed, nuanced even, especially the terrible Major. The ending seemed slightly rushed, but worked. For a novel with a fairly straight forward black and white premise, there are terrific moments of moral complexity, such as the casual indifference to the value of individual lives displayed (horrifyingly enough) by both side. Something about the end justifying the means and all the heavy implications of that. But the main protagonists carry a finely tuned moral compass and strive, always, for the greater good. Because, of course, evil is what takes place when good people do nothing. So yeah, read this book and find out how it all plays out. Read it to contemplate modern politics that are all too often stranger than fiction. Read it simply because it’s a powerhouse of a story about a frighteningly plausible future. One that was and is a reality in some areas of the world today. Really good book and a most auspicious debut. Not to mention a refreshingly gender neutral estrogen free work of dystopian fiction. Recommended. Thanks Netgalley.