In the Netherlands, new government reforms have been made to make it so every family is cared for and no one is left homeless. However, as part of a population control effort, there is a credit reduction for families with second children. Instead of registering Sin's brother, Cross, her parents keep him as a secret. Which would have been fine, if he weren't diabetic. When Sin is caught stealing insulin, she's sent to the Hangar.
She's given the standard sentence - 100 days, 144,000 minutes. Kept track of with a tracer bracelet that counts down the time and keeps track of her heart rate. The only sort of supervision inside the Hangar is through the bracelets; if an inmate's heartrate rises too high, they're given an electric shock, to discourage violence amongst them.
When she gets inside, she quickly finds out the girls are divided between the Long-termers, who have more than the standard sentence, and the ones with a shorter sentence, known as guppies. These are left to do all the work, and given the leftovers of the supplies that are sent down. The long-termers aren't afraid of violently putting the other girls in their place, in fact, they seem to relish in it. Sin isn't one to back down, but she struggles to remember that she's not here to change the way things are run. She has to find a way out, and back to her brother. Before his supplies run out.
When the next girl is sent down, Frankie, she seems to know a lot more about the Hangar than is public knowledge. She was sent down for being part of a protest, speaking out against the president. An act that is quickly punished and kept from becoming public knowledge. The government for the people doesn't have division. Even though it's grown more oppressive than what it started out as.
An interesting premise with a harsh, exacting leadership and a mix of characters who wanted to make a change, and those who just wanted a life of safety. I did feel let down by the ending, I was expecting more of a plan and follow through, so for me there was a lot of build up for a very abrupt, almost open-ended ending. There was some closure, but an overall lack of fulfillment.
If we had followed Sin's story arc alone, I think that sense of closure would have been different. Her goal, her ending she envisioned, was a lot more realized. With Frankie, there were more questions, more left unsaid, and I really question whether she accomplished what she set out to do.
Thank you to Lost Island Press for the ARC. I'm always happy to see your catalogue expanding and new authors joining, all opinions are my own.