PenelopeEdwards
In the city of In the city of Elend, emotions have been illegal for forty-three years. The government distributes Nullen through the water supply, a compound that keeps its citizens in a state of permanent grey calm, and children are raised in Accord Institutes designed to monitor, suppress, and report any flicker of feeling before it can spread.
Seventeen-year-old Maren Voss has always been a model citizen. She drinks her water. She files her expressions. She measures a crack in her ceiling and tells herself it means nothing.
But when a four-second fragment of forbidden music leaks through a projector in her Archival Studies class, something in Maren shifts, something the Nullen can't quite reach. And when her classmate Cel taps her foot in the silence afterward, Maren realises she is not the only one.
What begins as two girls quietly stopping drinking the water becomes something far more dangerous: a network of teenagers learning, for the first time, what it means to feel, to grieve, to hope, to rage, to love, in a world that has decided all of those things are the same as death.
The Bureau is watching. The compliance towers never sleep. And Maren is beginning to understand that the most revolutionary act in Elend isn't a weapon or a manifesto.
It's a song.