Back Cover:Jack is five. He lives in a single, locked room with his Ma.
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Thoughts:
Poor Jack. He's never been outside, never looked out a window, seen anything real that isn't in his room or on the TV. It quickly become apparent to the reader that Jack and his Ma are being held captive in a soundproofed shed, and no one knows they are there.
This is told from the point of view of Jack, which makes it even more heartbreaking, as he doesn't really understand the predicament he is in. He doesn't realise things on the TV are real and there is more to the world than his tiny home. He is, in fact, rather happy in his bubble of ignorance.
So when his Ma decides it is time to escape, with Jack playing the starring role in her master plan, what follows is even more dramatic than you would imagine.
I won't go much further, lest you actually be intending to read this book, except to say that it is very gripping. Despite not being a short book (it is average at 400 pages), I finished this within a day. A 3 hour commute and a lunch break to be specific. But that is also helped by a pretty simplistic dialogue with not a great deal of descriptive location settings. This works, however, because of the limitations in the protagonist being only 5.
I was interested in that while I sympathised a lot with the character of Ma (I mean, kidnapped at 19 and held captive as a sex slave - c'mon. You gotta feel badly for the lass), I didn't particularly like her much. But I don't think that really matters. I also wonder if this is one of those books that would affect me differently if I were a mother. I was pretty indifferent to We Need to Talk About Kevin, and I'm certain my childlessness had a lot to do with that.
Despite the storyline feeling a little like it was pinched from relatively recent news stories, this book was a refreshing change to the other things I've been reading lately and I enjoyed it immensely.
Verdict: 4/5
