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The Liberty Box, Book 1

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The Liberty Box, Book 1

By: C.A. Gray
Narrated by: Melissa Williams
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About this listen

Kate Brandeis has it all: a famous reporter at the age of 24, she's the face of the Republic of the Americas. She has a loving fiancée and all the success she could wish for. But when she learns of the death of a long-forgotten friend, her investigations unravel her perfect memories, forcing her to face the fact that she's been living a lie.

Jackson MacNamera, trained from a young age in the art of mind control, returns to the Republic for his mother's funeral. Within a few hours of his arrival, authorities collect Jackson and take him by force to a room ironically called The Liberty Box, where he must choose between surrendering his thoughts to the new Republic, or fleeing for his freedom.

Kate, bereaved and confused, finds her way to a cave community of refugees, where Jackson seems to offer her an escape from her grief. The two forge an uneasy bond, and in the process Jackson learns that Kate has some insight which may help the hunters in their attempt to free other citizens from the tyranny of the Potentate. Against the expressed wishes of the Council, the hunters plot a series of daring raids, attempting to prove that not only is freedom possible, but that the citizens are not too far gone to desire it. But with the odds so stacked against them, can the refugees succeed in their rescue missions right under the Potentate's nose?

©2015 Lauren Deville (P)2016 Lauren Deville
Dystopian Fiction Science Fiction Young Adult Refugee
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What listeners say about The Liberty Box, Book 1

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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Politics + scifi

Starts off with a good hook, but as it progresses the story becomes very politicized and it's hard to keep track of who's involved with who and what plans actually entail.

Narrator did a good job. Could use more variety in different voices to difference who's who.

Not boring, but wouldn't read the rest of the series.

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Good Premise

I like this well enough, but I think I'm not gonna continue with the series. While I liked the premise, the story itself is nothing out of the ordinary and also very predictable.

In the beginning I was hooked, wanting to know more about this new world, but soon a lot of things became hard to swallow. I can suspend my disbelief, but there was somethings that just didn't sit right with me. Like the fact that the refugees has this whole area to grow plants, they can hunt, they have a government and all near a big metropolitan area. The brainwave stuff and the insta-love was kind of silly, I didn't buy the technology nor their love.

Melissa Williams did an OK job. The voices weren't very distinguishable, but she pull of their emotions and her pacing was good.

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