Dorret is picked up in front of her home and brought along, with other dispensables , to the Unit. They are warmly greeted by staff and others that live there and shown to their apartments. Everyone on the Unit have their very own apartment complete with kitchenette. Later that day there is a welcome party, where Dorret and the other new people meet more of the other dispensables.
The new people get to have 4 days to get use to the Unit and take advantage of all of the luxury amenities before they must go to the lab to be given full physicals and orientation to what is expected of them. Soon they will become human lab animals and be enrolled in different studies and lab experiments. Eventually they with have to donate their organs to those deemed needed.
Dorret is lucky that she like physical exercise so much. In her first study all she has to do is exercise for 4 hours per day. She doesn’t have to take drugs or be exposed to chemicals etcetera. She also meets a fellow writer, Johnnas who she knew from the outside. They start dating and fall in love. She soon is resigned to her fate. However, as time passes and occurrences happen, she no longer feels content.
The night before Dorret’s first donation, a kidney she is quite scarred. Johnnas tries to comfort her and tells her that he is getting along fine with one kidney. She recovers from the surgery and then goes on to the next experiment. She had to take a pill three times per day. Luckily she was given a placebo because all the others who were given the real thing were permanently brain damaged and sent for their final donations.
I enjoyed this book. The translation to English is smooth and the writing is quite flood yet simple. I have two complaints however. The first is a small one. IMO, Holmqvist used to many similes. They felt quite contrived to me.
The other problem I have with the book is that , Holmqvist doesn’t describe what is happening around the rest of the world. Do all countries have this policy that makes people at a certain age and status become dispensable and therefore, get turned into biological material. Could Dorret flee to another country before her 50th birthday and be allowed to live out her natural life?
Despite my problems with the book, I am glad I read it. It would make a great book club book and great for an ethics debate. It is an enjoyable, yet horrifying dystopian story.
3.5/5
Thanks to Tony Viardo of Blue Dot Literary for a copy of this book.
I enjoyed this book and just assumed the policy was world-wide as I read it. The book gave me a lot to think about.
I loved this book. I still think about it and at work we have had a couple discussion concerning this and proposed national health care plans.
Kathy, I’m guessing that she wasnted us to assume it but I would have liked it if she covered it. The world is a very large place. It was very thought provoking!
Nancy, It is quite timely with the hot topic today in the U.S, health care. Canada has had socialized medicine for a very long time and I can’t help but laugh when some Americans make it sound like a death sentence. I was born and raised in the U.S. and had a medical problem in my twenties that I got care for from an HMO. It was when I moved here to Canada I found out was really wrong with me and got the surgery I needed. The HMO didn’t care about me, just the budget! Because of them, I was unable to have children.
Dystopian gives me the willies *shivers* but you’ve got me curious about those similes … I think I could actually handle this one. Thanks for the review, I may give it a try!
I want to read this one very much! Great review.
This sounds good. The only thing I knew about it is that older people get sent off to some weird retirement home. The part about the organs is freaky though!
Wanda, you may like this one. I would be interested in reading your take on it, if you read it.
Nicola, I think that you would like this one.
J.T. the human guinea pig treatments are pretty bad too.
Not normally the type of book, that I read, but it looks interesting.