

I was actually expecting a twist in the execution of the prison break that never came. The book sets out a path and follows it at a brisk pace. The “guards” at the prison are conveniently few enough in number and consistent in routine, despite Alex’s assertions early on that they don’t follow any set schedule or rotation. **Spoiler alert** If you’ve read “The Hunger Games,” you’ll know what’s going to happen to Monty as soon as he’s taken from his cell.

There are a few elements of the book that work because it is a young adult book but don’t really hold up as horror or science fiction.

As the narrator, Alex has a couple of dream sequences and flashbacks, but the book is certainly more about where he is than who he was. The book doesn’t spend a lot of time developing any of the characters. The main characters also include Donovan, a bigger kid that’s been in the prison since shortly after it was founded Zee, another new guy who comes to the prison at the same time as Alex and a couple of maniacs named Kevin and Gary. The main character, Alex, is incarcerated for something he didn’t do, but much like the main characters in the film “Don’t Breathe,” he’s put himself in such a situation that you can’t feel entirely bad for him. The prison is just for boys it goes about a mile underground and features things that go bump in the night. The book is about 98% plot movement about a prison break. This is definitely the type of book you can read in one sitting. Emily wrote, “If you’re looking for a tense, fast-paced and frightening book that pulls you in immediately and makes your heart pound, I cannot recommend Lockdown enough.” This is another book I checked out based on recommendations from my favorite Goodreads reviewers, this one being by Emily May.
