In the distant future, after the world economy took a final nosedive, the government started to cut federal spending, pensions disappeared, education became a privilege, and healthcare was non-existent. Punishment satellites took over police enforcement and delivered painful, or fatal, judgments from the sky. And the old, the infirm, even the unwanted children of society were dumped, just like the daily garbage deliveries, on what is known as the Island.
At age sixty-three, Big Guy, former mafia enforcer and now 10-year veteran of the Island, is nothing more than bag of bones, a shell of his former self, living in a shack built out of garbage. Whether it is old age or the nightly visits from the murderous hordes of drugged-out miscreants that rule the Island, Big Guy is ready to die. There is nothing to live for on this appallingly inhumane garbage pile, the “Nursing Home from Hell”. No one can leave the Island; the punishment satellites will prevent that. At night, when the fog rolls in and the drums start to beat, the inhabitants hide in fear from what they have come to accept as life. And just when Big Guy thinks there is nothing to live for, he finds hope in the strangest place.
When I first picked up this book, I was wondering if I could even finish it. It was bleak and depressing and old people were slaughtered with machetes. But then, I realized that whenever I put down the book I could not stop thinking about Big Guy and his friends. I started to care about them. I wanted to know what would happen next. Interspersed with scenes of carnage and fear, the author gives Big Guy, and the reader, little Easter eggs of hope. The result is a powerfully written, intense work of fiction that is a frightening look at what our future might hold.
Written in first person narrative, the book stands out from the countless dystopia novels on the market, as these main characters are “old”. There is no teenage angst or implausible exploits pulled off by someone barely old enough to shave. All the main characters bring intelligence gained only through time and experience. All bring a painful, sometimes dishonorable, history that enriches the story.
I’ve heard this is the first of a trilogy, but the ending easily leaves the reader satisfied. But, if the author is writing more about Big Guy, then I will read it because I want to know what happens.