Imagine
growing up in a small town in New Mexico. There is no crime, no one is
unemployed, no poverty, everyone is peaceful, share everything justly and are
completely honest with each other.
Sounds
good, right? Almost too good.
Serenity is
such a paradise. Although a bit boring. Except for the plastic factory that no
one can enter without working there and the Serenity trophy, a gift from
Roosevelt himself, there’s not much to see. Eli Baris still feels pretty good about
living there, and most of his classmates agree with him. That’s why hardly
anyone of them ever crossed the city borders, not even for a vacation with
their parents. Why should they? Serenity holds everything you need, and out
there you only get violence and hate.
And an old
car that Eli and his best friend Randy want to explore, somewhere in the forest
just beyond the city limits. But Eli never gets there because when reaching the
border he suddenly collapses with pain and nausea. What fist seems to be a
coincidence turns out to be a complex plan to keep Eli and ten other kids
inside the city. But why them? And why does it seem as if in this peaceful
idyll so much is a lie or even life-threatening?
“Masterminds”
by Gordon Korman is an exceptional novel for young readers 12 years or older. In
about 330 pages happens so much that would actually be part of a dystopian
novel like “Hunger Games” or “Divergent”, and yet while reading you realize
quickly that what’s happening in this book could happen just as well in real
life. To be honest it is not easy to review this book without spoilers – and there’s
much to spoil given the loads of revelations and plot twists “Masterminds” has
to offer. Thus, there’s not much more to do than simply express a clear
recommendation: For everyone who likes mystery, for everyone who’s flirting
with the thought of reading “Divergent” but would prefer less death – and for
everyone who likes to question right and wrong.
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