This was a book set in a dystopian future where sea levels have risen and dry land has decreased. The climate has also clearly changed and diseases such as Malaria have spread to Britain, and all other kinds of eco disasters are coming true. The eco-apocalypse, in short.
Noa Blake is just a normal 15 year old in 2059. Only normal is not good in this world. Children of the rich and powerful these days have nodes inserted into their heads where their brain meets their spine, and through these nodes they can instantly upload libraries of data into their brains.
The Territory is built on former high ground in Britain. The book is not specific where but perhaps the English Penines, rather than Scottish or Welsh Highlands. It does not really matter where though. What matters is that dry land ins limited and the population is too large, so all 15 year olds must go through an exam called the TAA and only those who pass can stay in the territory. The remainder are shipped off to "The Wetlands", a lawless dangerous area outside the safety of the territory where there is disease and a miserable subsistence existence waiting.
The book focuses on Noa and her norm friends, as well as the friction between them and the enhanced children, who are more or less guaranteed to pass their TAA.
This is a book that is about many things. It has love and loss, hope and despair, prejudice, bullying and a struggle against an authoritarian government.
In some ways the story failed to fully satisfy me. There were questions I had when it was all over, and I would have liked to have read more, but the story that is told is clearly the one the author intended, and ultimately it is a good one.
This is a first novel by this author, and published with the help of the Welsh Books Council. I think I picked it up at a book fair so maybe it is not widely known outside of Wales (which would explain why only I have a copy). Although not perfect, I thought the characterisation of Noa was very good, funny in parts, realistic in the main. her internal dialogue was a real strength of this book, and I would hope others might be interested enough to give it a go (and it is available for Kindle, so no need to worry about international orders).