Step inside the Factory in this suspenseful, page-turning exploration of power, exploitation, and the nature of time by Catherine Egan -- perfect for fans of Margaret Peterson Haddix and Gordon Korman!
Thirteen-year-old Asher Doyle is no stranger to misfortune. Bullied at school and struggling with problems at home, he dreams of the day he can leave it all behind him. That's when he receives an unexpected opportunity: an invitation to join the Factory -- a top-secret research facility that's supposedly developing renewable energy -- and Asher will be paid handsomely for his participation. It seems like the answer to all his problems.
But not everything is as it seems at the Factory. The other kids in the program are tired and sullen, almost as if they've had the life sucked out of them, and the staff members are clearly hiding something. What's more, Asher discovers he wasn't chosen at random; someone in the program desperately wants him to participate. Asher can't help but feel that whatever the Factory is doing, it's not what he or any of the other kids signed up for.
To Asher's horror, it turns out that the Factory isn't developing renewable energy at all. So what is the Factory up to, and more important, why? As conditions in the Factory worsen, Asher must team up with the other kids to uncover the sinister truth behind the experiment -- and his personal connection to it -- before someone gets seriously hurt.
Egan crafts a new science fiction novel with a suspenseful and original story. Thirteen-year-old Asher has grown up in a world wrecked by climate change and takes the chance to change his family's financial situation in a government-run experiment at a place known only as The Factory. There he joins a diverse group of youth desperate to earn income for their family. As kids start to suffer increasingly severe effects from the experiments, they must work together to find the truth and a way out. Egan does an excellent job of balancing worldbuilding, plot, and character development. The world presented through school lessons and character backstories is one of severe climate devastation and economic inequality. The cast of characters, primarily the children, is diverse in that it includes multiple ethnicities. While the point of view is Asher's, the other characters' histories, motivations, and personalities are developed enough that readers will be invested in them. This rich worldbuilding and character development carries through the slower paced first portion of the book until readers are rewarded with an increasingly fast-paced and tightly plotted final third that is hard to put down. The cliffhanger ending will leave readers eager for the next book. VERDICT Readers will devour this middle grade cli-fi adventure with excellent characters and a fascinating concept.--Elizabeth Nicolai
Copyright 2024 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
Budding dystopian and science-fiction readers will thrill at this gripping, fast-paced story with a cliffhanger ending . . . a thrilling and complex beginning to what will surely be a sought-after series.