A father taken from her at an early, remembrance now fading with the years as it's often to do. A mother in the advanced stages of illness, plagued by both kinds of pain. The physical partialy treatable with medication, the emotional is harder to entertain; we can hope it might be relieved in the afterlife, two hopeful endings to her pain. Like other parents her mother's latter pain will be exacerbated today by the school leavers Duty Call testing, which could see her anywhere after today. Roles are important in the times they live, without earning ration tickets, the unencumbered starve. Unlike most her peers, filling in for her mother sees a much earlier start and finish to her days. Life in the so-called right side of the Divide is harder for some. The youngest Drayton burns the candle harder than her siblings and at both ends, but without rations they'd neither have enough food for eating, nor the remainder traded for medication.
A dystopian society brought down by a ravenous virus, Arcadian life is set in a walled off world where only those who can work get to eat. An industry of life run by futuristic technologies, blood, sweat and tears. Roles are assigned and only those assignments are what you're intended for. Subsisting defines how most people live, rations divided according to an assumed contribution to society. Of course, just as in any system there's those that have and those that don't; and then there's those that are positioned above it. Roles define how and where you live, food the supreme currency of exchange. Quotas define what currency is given and most overseers would not have allowed a part-time picker in exchange, not when meeting the quota determines if all of those in their assembly will get enough. Just how Cyra's allocation of a role will affect them after today is just another in a long line of worries. One with the capacity to bring much harm.
Jackson, coming from a family line of picking leaders has been groomed his whole life, so allocation appears for him a formality only, like his siblings before him. His sun and physically groomed body shows, like hers, features that make his appearance more adult like. To Jackson she is known as Cy, and he offers assurances to calm her nerves, telling her that no matter the outcome of allocation her mother will be cared for. Despite this Cyra nonetheless plans to perform only as well as is necessary to ensure a progression from part-time to full-time picker. For her, Jackson's friendship and her mother's situation predetermined her planned fate. Although there does appear the subtlest insinuation that perhaps Jackson desires more for her life, not that Cyra seems cognizant of it.
The process and the day of testing reveal the depth of entrenchment as it is described by those inclined to see past the facade. The catch phrase moniker of "If it's meant to be, it will be" is seen for the mechanism it is in Cyra's eyes, one of many bestowers of false hope. Perhaps through her need and early acceptance over the past few years of her socioeconomic role, Cyra became enlightened to the absurdities professed by the agents of the system. If correct in her appraisal, she can even see it weighing on her principle, despite his role of grooming students for it. Through the Duty Call testing, none from Arbor in her lifetime were known to have escaped the plight of their parents. Regardless of her desires to perform badly, so that she might retain her ability to care for her ailing mother, Cyra was never under any illusions that if she worked hard at the methods of Duty Call that she'd indeed be able to lift her position within the social order.
To her mind picker parents would have picker kids, mining parents would have mining kids, scientist elites begat scientist kids, and so on and so forth. The illusion of hope died out for these hundreds upon hundreds of offspring throughout the locations she heard spoken of, only to be renewed again when children became parents; in the hope that the new generation will be able to lift itself from its disenfranchised roles. Only to restart a new cycle upon the next rung of the ladder. Even the so-called ideal matchings of male to female Pairings being another method of creating hope whilst ensuring the status quo. Yes you read right, even bonding for love is controlled, which is why Cyra's and Jackson's affections had to be contained. The miniscule affections they might be caught showing are the most serious of their infractions.
Against all the odds and her intentionally poor performance, the impossible happens as testers announce her new location to live will be in the capital city Eden. The truth of mother's sickness further twists the knife, that cuts the suffering young woman from all she knows. Visions precipitated by the strange technology used in genetic testing during Duty Call have inextricably come to pass. Dissociative she passes her last day in Arbor in a vigil by her mothers body's cooling side. Awash in grief and the glow of the a dawn the following day, she does the only thing she can: she packs her life so as to leave the past behind. As many of her fellow inhabitants stared on her in disbelief, resentment and jealousy when the announcement was made. Even Jackson could not bring a smile to his face. His own calling wasn't as it was expected either, Jackson is to betaken from his home just as her father was. Called to the Knight's Wall, he'll be a leader, but instead of pickers, it'll be soldiers.
With the official start of why Cyra was assigned to Eden revealed, so too is the greatest shock of all. The genetic testing of Duty Call was never as harmless as it seemed, nor for the purposes reported. The technology, it's lights, lasers and scanners which sank her conscious mind into the realms of visions taking place before their alloted time, was actually the true purpose to it's design. Designed to identify and unlock the secret presence of genes in the smallest number of Arcadians, to locate the Watchers who are quite simply that: they Watch. Much like the Lilitu, or succubi as they're known by another name, Watchers gain the experience of lucid dreaming. Though the ability is varied and the reach even more so, the young trainees speak of a lucid instinct that comes wihth the practised ability to tell them apart.
Therein the experience varies greatly but the underlying thread of lucidity appears as a commonality between Watchers. Cyra, like others in her small recruitment group, have abilities that if mastered correctly, become part of the ways control of Arcadia is maintained. As Watchers are shipped to places of interest to gain precognisant wisdom of the sorts of things that work against the regime, their immersion associates them with the people most likely to be a risk. Such a blatant admittance of their purpose, and even their existence, is of course shunned and to be denied, their training operates under the auspices that they're preventing innocent harm before it occurs.
As the disenfranchisement and the plethora of mechanisms used by Eden, the Council and High Chancellor Knight, to rule over Arcadia begin to take greater clarity in Cyra's mind, the controls and privilege of those in power grow with her awareness proportionately. Even more, her own awareness of her desensitisation becomes her greatest motivator to remain resolute. With particularly strong versions of some abilities sought in Watchers by the management of Eden, Cyra could undoubtedly be a star pupil, if only she would come onboard and commit fully.
Just as Tris of the Divergent Trilogy and Katniss of The Hunger Games shift from potential leaders in their societies to opponents of the regimes which run the same, Cyra secretly holds the keys to the destiny her mother gave her life to bring forth. If she can remain resolute and resist the persuasions of over indulgence whilst escaping the same regime which unlocked and trains her abilities, this young woman might become the saviour that's needed to crack the system wide and expose the lies whilst uniting the proletarians on both sides of the great Divide.
In small but significant ways The Watchers of Eden has components of The Hunger Games meets The Divergent Trilogy. Eden itself could be likened to The Capitol in The Hunger Games blended with the domed central hub where Tris and Four are taken in Allegiant after escaping the walled off city of Chicago. Cyra's and Ellie's guide Leeta has a similar role to that of Katnis' unconventional friend Effie, where although Effie/Leeta know the sales pitches of The Capitol/Eden they deep down can see the injustices, but choose to avoid acknowledgement unless under duress. Importantly though it would be a mistake to think they're mimicry, as very important differences occur.
Factions and Districts combine to make regions, which through geographical purpose and isolation, are divided into purposes for resource contribution to the whole body of society. As in the Districts only those fulfilling their alloted purpose and/or living within the Districts are allocated meager portions of rations based on their assumed importance to the hierarchy. And as with the Games where Districts have a mechanism of hope that their recruits will earn greater reward, and in the test for allocation to a Faction, individuals of the Duty Call have a mechanism of hope that they can earn higher rewards/rations/esteem through the ratings their tests assign them.
These are loose comparisons though and any strict adherence based on these well known dystopian ideologies should be avoided. The unique contribution to the storylines by the lore which comes with Watchers very much adds a significant fantasy element missing from the aforementioned tools. In this way the series herein is firmly taken into the Urban Fantasy/Science Fiction-Fantasy genres. The comparisons above are because they're widely known since completion of the movie series of the same names, and are mentioned in the hope they'll show the many captivating sorts of elements of the storylines herein. Not because they are the same. Intriguing characters and social order, combined with the scientific presence of fantastical elements in the plot, bridge the gap between dystopia and fantasy such that readers get flavours of both.
Lovable and diabolic characters, mystery and suspense, intrigue and entertainment, the list of adjectives could go on. Moving storylines combined with a world of alternate reality experiencing the same problems accompanying so many worlds regardless of time, space and culture. The thirsts of those without power who seek it and the drive of those who have it and will stop at nothing to keep it, are amongst the most destructive natures of human social organisation regardless of the technologies used to enforce those wills. Whilst there are numerous examples throughout fiction novels that are based around the notions of watchers given gifts to look after humankind, the principles herein are unique enough to be separated from the rest.
If you read this, you'll be pleased with series idea whilst enjoying T.C. Edge's style. Ideas are expressed freely and fluently without going into needless descriptions to bring forth the imagery of the Arcadian world. The novel is complete in it's own right but still finishes at a new beginning and somewhat of a cliffhanger too. Effective to say the least, the cliffhanger is not totally unseen; which should lower any frustrations that can be precipitated by having read a great book only to finish at partial ends. A definite 5 ☆☆☆☆ book and tantalising opener to a new series with must read novels to come. I always love it when stumbling upon a new author you know you'll need to follow, as the possibilities are refreshed every time.