Review Detail
3.7 3
Young Adult Fiction
1160
Action! It's All About the Monsters and the Fighting
Overall rating
3.0
Plot
N/A
Characters
N/A
Writing Style
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A
Kids these days are just a bunch of hoodlums. They don't got no respect. They're violent because of their video games and the like. It certainly is not too difficult to imagine that, should there be some event to set it off, that governments (and the people) might get the idea that some kids are irredeemable. Some people cannot be saved, cannot be turned into good citizens; they should be allowed to rot.
Of course, this is a serious waste of resources. They're not okay with the death sentence, but they're willing to condemn children to a life sentence without possibility of parole in a jail of horrors. Right. The logic of other people confuses me. Even though they don't give the boys much, this still has to be an incredibly expensive operation.
Then you have to factor in the fact that the folks running Furnace are framing boys for murder to add to the prison population, probably because they're dying off too fast, thanks to the violence of the guards and the violence of the inmates. I really am looking forward to continuing with the series. At the end of Lockdown, you don't know much. Basically, you know enough to know that some seriously bad shit is going down.
I mentioned that Alex was framed, and he was, but I what I have not yet stressed is the robbery part. Alex is not a good guy. He was a bully and graduated from stealing classmate's money to robbing homes. He definitely was a criminal. Even so, he does not deserve the treatment he's receiving in Lockdown. It's important to keep that in mind, because that's much of the point; this setting makes even the boys harsher than Alex seem somewhat sympathetic.
Lockdown will definitely appeal to teenage boys, full of violence and creepy monsters. Of course, don't let that limit you, because I enjoyed it. I'm looking forward to finding out more about the dystopian world that created Furnace.
Of course, this is a serious waste of resources. They're not okay with the death sentence, but they're willing to condemn children to a life sentence without possibility of parole in a jail of horrors. Right. The logic of other people confuses me. Even though they don't give the boys much, this still has to be an incredibly expensive operation.
Then you have to factor in the fact that the folks running Furnace are framing boys for murder to add to the prison population, probably because they're dying off too fast, thanks to the violence of the guards and the violence of the inmates. I really am looking forward to continuing with the series. At the end of Lockdown, you don't know much. Basically, you know enough to know that some seriously bad shit is going down.
I mentioned that Alex was framed, and he was, but I what I have not yet stressed is the robbery part. Alex is not a good guy. He was a bully and graduated from stealing classmate's money to robbing homes. He definitely was a criminal. Even so, he does not deserve the treatment he's receiving in Lockdown. It's important to keep that in mind, because that's much of the point; this setting makes even the boys harsher than Alex seem somewhat sympathetic.
Lockdown will definitely appeal to teenage boys, full of violence and creepy monsters. Of course, don't let that limit you, because I enjoyed it. I'm looking forward to finding out more about the dystopian world that created Furnace.
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