Finn had been flung on his face and chained to the stone slabs of the transitway.
His arms, spread wide, were weighted with links so heavy, he could barely drag his wrists off the ground. His ankles were tangled in a slithering mass of metal, bolted through a ring in the pavement. He couldn’t raise his chest to get enough air. He lay exhausted, the stone icy against his cheek.
But the Civicry were coming at last.
He felt them before he heard them; vibrations in the ground, starting tiny and growing until they shivered in his teeth and nerves. Then noises in the darkness, the rumble of migration trucks, the slow hollow clang of wheel rims. Dragging his head around, he shook dirty hair out of his eyes and saw how the parallel grooves in the floor arrowed straight under his body. He was chained directly across the tracks.
Sweat slicked his forehead. Gripping the frosted links with
one glove he hauled his chest up and gasped in a breath. The
air was acrid and smelled of oil.
It was no use yelling yet. They were too far off and wouldn’t hear him over the clamor of the wheels until they were well into the vast hall. He would have to time it exactly. Too late, and the trucks couldn’t be stopped, and he would be crushed. Desperately, he tried to avoid the other thought. That they might see him and hear him and not even care.
Lights.
Small, bobbing, handheld lights. Concentrating, he counted nine, eleven, twelve; then counted them again to have a numÂber that was firm, that would stand against the nausea choking his throat.
Nuzzling his face against the torn sleeve for some comfort he thought of Keiro, his grin, the last mocking little slap as he’d checked the lock and stepped back into the dark. He whisÂ
pered the name, a bitter whisper: “Keiro.” Vast halls and invisible galleries swallowed it. Fog hung in
the metallic air. The trucks clanged and groaned.
He could see people now, trudging. They emerged from the darkness so muffled against the cold, it was hard to tell if they were children or old, bent women. Probably childrenÑthe aged, if they kept any, would ride on the trams, with the goods. A black-and-white ragged flag draped the leading truck; he could see its design, a heraldic bird with a silver bolt in its beak.
“Stop!” he called. “Look! Down here!”
The grinding of machinery shuddered the floor. It whined in his bones. He clenched his hands as the sheer weight and impetus of the trucks came home to him, the smell of sweat from the massed ranks of men pushing them, the rattle and slither of piled goods. He waited, forcing his terror down, secÂond by second testing his nerve against death, not breathing, not letting himself break, because he was Finn the Starseer, he could do this.
First published in the United States 2010 by Dial Books
Published in Great Britain 2007 by Hodder Children’s Books
Copyright © 2007 by Catherine Fisher
All rights reserved
Imagine a prison where detainees live not only in cells, but also in metal forests, dilapidated cities and unbounded wilderness. A prison sealed for centuries so that the inmates’ children suffer the same fate as their parents. A prison where only one man has ever escaped. This is Incarceron. And this is where teenaged prisoner Finn hatches a daring escape plan. It involves a crystal key and a girl named Claudia who’s facing her own incarceration in the form of an arranged marriage to a man she cannot stand. But they don’t realize that escape will cost far more than they know. Because Incarceron is alive. Acclaimed novelist Catherine Fisher once again captivates readers with this gripping, twist-filled futuristic fantasy! (Ages 9-12)
Hardcover: 448 pages
Publisher: Penguin Group (USA) ( February 01, 2010 )
Item #: 83-3317
ISBN: 9780803733961
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 0.0 inches
Product Weight: 20.0 ounces

While I agree that 9 year olds may be a little young for this book, all the 12 year olds I know would be more understanding of this book than most adults are willing to admit. I didn't buy it at first because I am not much of a SciFi Reader. I kept seeing reviews and when it finally made the New York Times Bestseller list I bought it. I'm glad I did. The story line is rather unique, it was well written enough to keep my interest and has a surprise ending. I am passing this on to my grandchildren and I will definitely buy the sequel when it comes to CBOMC as I can't wait to see what happens next.
Reviewer: Peggy
...Really? Where on earth do you see it stated that it was intended for a 9-12 yr old? 9th - 12th grade indicates HIGH SCHOOL AGE. Not fifth or 6th. And it even says in the description that she's being set up for an arranged marriage.
I thought this book was wonderful. I couldn't put it down, and the end shocked the mess out of me.
Reviewer: Jelissa
I loved this book but then again I am 30 y/o. Probably too deep for 9-12 y/o. Don't let this fool you, it was very well written and hard to put down. I have already ordered the sequal!!!!
Reviewer: katie
I don't think this book was intended for children ages 9 to 12. Amazon's summary indicates 9th to 12th grade. I received this, but am sending it back. I'm pretty sure my 10 year old is not ready to read about arranged marriages.(!)
Reviewer: Mamakat