First, I have to apologize. I noticed this morning that this post went up without the review! So, it's time to correct that.
Today's read is the first in a new science fiction series for young adults. Not only does that tend to catch my attention, but this one is also only 147 pages long. Scifi fans out there know that short reads like this are rare, which makes me wonder why. The other side of me is thrilled because it's nice to pick up a quick read, every now and then, too.
So, I'm opening this one up to see if it's grabbing fun or not.
TRANSITION AGE
by Tyler Corriveau
YA Science Fiction
147 pages
In a future rebuilt after nearly a century of war, collapse, and environmental failure, humanity survives inside mile-high vertical cities governed by artificial systems designed to optimize life, suppress instability, and enforce order at all costs. History is managed. Memory is curated. What came before has been buried beneath steel and data, entombed in an artificial twilight. It is an age shaped by systems, and a generation raised within their limits.
Iris Vale knows this world only as it has been presented to her until she escapes a covert research facility hidden deep within the city’s lower layers. Years of her life have been taken, her memories fractured, her existence classified. As fragments of her past begin to resurface, Iris realizes she was never an anomaly. She is part of a larger truth buried inside the very systems designed to control humanity.
Set in Chicago in the year 2159, Transition Age follows Iris as she navigates towering vertical districts, rigid social hierarchies, surveillance-driven institutions, and the forces that shaped her into something both feared and contained. As truth presses against control, she must confront what reclaiming her past will cost, and whether exposing what was buried is worth destabilizing a world built to value order over humanity.
Iris Vale knows this world only as it has been presented to her until she escapes a covert research facility hidden deep within the city’s lower layers. Years of her life have been taken, her memories fractured, her existence classified. As fragments of her past begin to resurface, Iris realizes she was never an anomaly. She is part of a larger truth buried inside the very systems designed to control humanity.
Set in Chicago in the year 2159, Transition Age follows Iris as she navigates towering vertical districts, rigid social hierarchies, surveillance-driven institutions, and the forces that shaped her into something both feared and contained. As truth presses against control, she must confront what reclaiming her past will cost, and whether exposing what was buried is worth destabilizing a world built to value order over humanity.
MY TIDBITS
A rich, scifi world opens up and races forward in a chase which keeps tension high the entire way through.
Iris suddenly wakes up in a lab, riddled with injuries and connected to machines, but there's little time to think as alarms howl and smoke rises. She has no idea what is going on...she has no idea who she even is. But that she needs to escape or die is very clear. Heading toward what she hopes is an exit, she bursts free and falls into a river just before everything falls apart and would drown if a passing small boat didn't fish her out further down the river. The man immediately recognizes that she's in trouble and promises to take her somewhere safe to give her care, while showing obvious disdain for whatever place it was that she escaped from. Unfortunately, those who held her are never going to let her go and will hunt her down no matter what.
The author begins this tale in an original and potent way. Instead of diving right into the story, the first 17 or so pages hit with summaries of the years, starting with modern times and ending when this story takes place, 2159. These lay out political and social events in a grabbing way to show how present day mutated into the world, where Iris faces her adventure, and the logic is nicely presented to create an intriguing and solid foundation. Then, we meet Iris...or the girl who later learns that she's Iris.
The moment Iris awakens, the book races with just enough breath in between action scenes to let the characters each gain a bit of depth as well. While it's not clear what Iris is up against, at first, the danger of the situation is impossible to miss. The hunt for her identity soon molds into a thick web of intrigue, which seems to grow more sinister and dire with each secret that's revealed. Add the constant ticking of the clock, which Iris faces since those hunting her are very powerful and capable, and it's a read to hold in the pages the entire way through. Considering that it's only around 150 pages, that's a short burst, too.
My critique: the book is too short...and I say that without taking away stars from my review. The book grabs and I found myself at the end faster than I realized that I'd reached the last page. That doesn't happen often. Unfortunately, the ending hits on a huge cliffhanger. It gives me the impression of a quick episode of a tale rather than the first novel in a series because everything is open and nothing is tied up. But I definitely want to know what happened next. So, those readers who don't like cliffhangers will have a problem with this, but those who simply enjoy good, grabbing tales in quick bites at a time...well, this one is exactly that.

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