Outside

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Age Range
9+
Release Date
October 07, 2025
ISBN
978-1546138143
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From three-time Newbery Honor winner Jennifer L. Holm, a chilling but heartfelt story of a girl being raised in a compound who doesn't understand how isolated and unusual her life is... until she must encounter the outside world.
Whatever you do, don't leave home.
Razzi has always been told: Don't go Outside. It isn't safe. There are people and creatures out there that will harm you. The walls of the Refuge will protect you from them.

Razzi's friend Ollie was curious about Outside... and it led to his death. So Razzi is trying to be on her best behavior. She is the oldest kid left, the one the younger kids look up to. She has to follow the rules.

But Outside has a way of getting in, and Razzi, guided by a dog she has a strangely close connection with, wonders what it’s like to run free beyond the walls.

If she steps away from everything she's ever known... what will she find?

Editor review

1 review
Belief becomes reality
(Updated: June 21, 2026)
Overall rating
 
4.0
Plot
 
4.0
Characters
 
4.0
Writing Style
 
4.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
N/A
What worked:
The setting feels dystopian, as the characters live in a large mansion they call the Refuge. The kids don’t remember what happened, but the adults tell them that a Great Poisoning killed most of the people on Earth. Most of the characters haven’t ventured outside the Refuge because the Poisoned are lurking. The kids are taught the dangers of these infected humans and learn survival techniques in case they ever encounter one. However, Razzi remains curious about what she might find on the Outside. Readers will experience the shock she discovers on the Outside.
Razzi must have a heart transplant, and she develops subtle changes throughout the story. She hears a voice in her head that causes her to behave impulsively, and her hearing and eyesight become more acute. She’s especially attuned to nature, and she reacts strangely to her brother’s pet rabbit. Her parents and friends are confused by changes in her behavior, but they attribute it to puberty. Other traditionally peaceful animals seem to fear Razzi, and she’s even bitten on the finger. She envisions a greyhound in a cage and almost becomes obsessed with finding out what’s happened to it.
The plot addresses a couple of issues that may connect with many young readers. Razzi’s good friend Ollie dies from a terrible accident, and she often thinks about her life with him. Ollie was infatuated with the world outside the Refuge, and readers learn Razzi has developed the same curiosity. His death also makes Razzi the eldest child, and she’s expected to be responsible and perfect as the new First. The adults’ expectations are impossible to meet, and Razzi feels the pressure of being a role model for the younger children. Her fixation with the Outside, Ollie’s memory, and her behavioral differences cause her to make some irresponsible choices. Many readers will be the oldest kids in their families, and they can relate to the occasional unfairness that accompanies that role.
What didn’t work as well:
Readers may be curious about Razzi after the book ends. The changes she goes through after the heart transplant continue once the plot’s conflict is resolved. Do the urges and heightened senses continue, and do others still notice how they affect her personality? Razzi’s changes are the only element of science fiction in the book, which is confusing when reflecting on the overall story.
The final verdict:
Readers may have suspicions about what’s happening, but the plot’s resolution may still be a surprise. This book is reminiscent of a few other middle-grade books, but I recommend you try this one for yourself.
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5.0(1)
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Great read
(Updated: June 21, 2026)
Overall rating
 
5.0
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
5.0
Writing Style
 
5.0
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I just tore through Outside by Jennifer L. Holm and it gave me that delicious, creeping sense of what if everything you’ve been told is a lie? From the very first line Whatever you do, don’t leave home I was hooked.

Razzi has lived her whole life inside the Refuge, surrounded by walls, rules, and warnings about the dangers of the world beyond. Her best friend Ollie broke those rules and paid the ultimate price, so Razzi’s determined to be the good one, the kid the others can look up to. But Holm makes you feel the itch of curiosity right alongside her: the tug of fresh air through a crack in the wall, the haunting connection with a mysterious dog who seems to belong on the other side.

What I loved most was how Razzi isn’t a typical dystopian chosen one. She’s scared, she’s cautious, and she loves her little found family inside the Refuge. That makes her yearning to see Outside and the choices she makes so much more poignant and believable. And the world-building? Just enough detail to keep me constantly questioning what’s real and what’s myth.

Outside is both a survival story and an awakening, full of quiet tension and emotional gut punches. It’s perfect if you like books that explore loyalty, freedom, and what it really means to be safe.
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