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Title: The Coterie-Declaration
ISBN: 978-1-62420-310-7
Author: Richard C. McClain
Genre: Young Adult/Dystopian
Excerpt Heat Level: 1
Book Heat Level: 2
TAGLINE
Dakarai Holt, sixteen, is sentenced to a rehabilitation
facility. He unearths a conspiracy imposing mind control with ramifications
affecting the U.S and the greater world.
BLURB
Arrested for hacking,
socially awkward and speech-impaired sixteen-year-old Dakarai Holt is sentenced
to two years at Sheffield Academy, an exclusive juvenile rehabilitation
facility. Within the first two hours, Dak is subjected to mandatory
brainwashing. The academy’s enforcers, the R.A.T. SQUADS, patrol Sheffield to
ensure each student's full compliance. Gacheru, Dak’s roommate, pressures him
to drink a tonic that conspicuously counteracts Sheffield’s indoctrination.
This places Dak in the middle of many adversarial and explosive situations.
Additionally, Dak becomes knotted in a clandestine plot involving the Secretary
of State and a mysterious group who goes by the name, The Coterie. While at
Sheffield, Dak must find a way to survive the R.A.T. SQUADS’ terror, the
annexation of a remote island, and battle his own inner demons.
REVIEW:
The Coterie Declaration
By Richard McClain
Review by Courtney Bearss
Rating: 5 Stars.
The Coterie Declaration, by Richard McClain is a contemporary
read about a Sixteen year old Dakarai Holt, who is arrested
for hacking. He’s socially awkward and speech-impaired, but he’s an
awesome hacker. When he is sentenced to two years at a Juvenile rehab,
the story takes off with government brainwashing along with a plot to take over
a remote island. Dakarai however has found a way to thwart the
brainwashing, but then he has a battle of his own against not only the rehab
enforcers, but he has to fight in silence as well as try to overcome his own
inner darkness.
This was a complicated, but highly enjoyable read. From
the first page the reader is dumped right into the action. You sympathize
with Dak as he struggles with his inability to speak and other emotional
issues, compounded by his absent and uncaring father. This book is full
of suspense and action and moves along very quickly. The wait for the
next book in this series will be long for someone like me that wants to know
what happens next. Well done, Mr. McClain. I highly recommend this
book.
EXCERPT
It is 04:22:31 on Saturday morning and I'm
having trouble sleeping. I sit up and turn the light on to give life to the
dark room. Instead of celebrating Gacheru's absences, allowing me space to live
on my own and nurture my promise to abort ideas of relationships, worrying
about him is all I seem to be doing.
A sound at the door steals my attention. I wait
for Gacheru to enter but nothing happens. On the floor underneath the door, an
envelope sticks halfway into the room. I pick it up and work my fingers
underneath the sealed flap and run my fingers the entire length.
The note reads,
Please put the twenty-five billion back.
I sit on the bed as the weight of the words hits
me. Nothing in the words themselves denotes any kind of emotion. Except for
maybe the "please." Still, a cursory reading initiates a panic attack
in my body. A brown bag sits on the floor. I roll off the bed, hitting the
floor hard. I pull the bag to my face, scrunch my body to the fetal position,
and rock and breathe…
Who sent me the note? I ask an hour later. As
far as I know, the man who accosted me in the computer room and his superiors
are the only ones aware of what they think is a hacking mistake. To apprise me
of this kind of critical information now when I'm not under the influence would
violate Sheffield's environment of covertness.
Revealing such knowledge to me makes no sense.
I read the letter again. The word
"please" continues to stand out. Sheffield has not proved themselves
friendly on the administrative, teacher, or security levels. Why now would they
want me to "please" put the money back? They're the type that would
hang me up by my thumbs and torture me to get the information. I exaggerate of
course.
This message couldn't have come from them. Which
begs the question, who sent me this note?
I sift through short list of names. Gacheru's is
the only name on it. Somehow he found out I took it and wants me to return the
money. He's the only one I know who's been able to bypass Sheffield's mind
control and for whatever reasons considered it important that I not succumb to
their brainwashing. Would Gacheru send a note? He could speak to me any time.
It's not Gacheru. That leaves nobody.
I walk to the window. Darkness still pervades
the night, fighting to maintain control. Daylight is hours away. Since the note
can't be from Sheffield or Gacheru, I decide to get rid of the evidence. I rip
the area of the paper around the sentence and then stick it in my mouth, chew
it till it's soggy, and swallow it.
I lie back in bed when I remember the drinks in
the closet. It takes a second to pry the board loose. There is nothing in the
crevice apart from a thick envelope and three cans. On closer inspection, all
are empty. I put the hollow cans back inside and replace the board. The
contents of the envelope are none of my business. I'm not a spy. Gacheru helped
me for a reason. To betray him this way reeks of self-interest, the worst kind
of egotism.
Lightning strikes my mind. Three cans could only
mean one thing. A third person has ingested the liquid and like Gacheru and me,
this person is resistant to Sheffield's mind control.
Who?
Since Sheffield wouldn't ask me to put the money
back except under mind control, and Gacheru could talk to me any time, the
person who sent the letter has to be the person who drank the third drink.
Why should I put the money back, especially if
we're seemingly on the same side? Wouldn't we have a better chance of stopping
whatever it is they're doing and going to do by hitting them in the wallet?
It seems cut-and-dry to me.
While back on the bed sheet I rack my mind,
wondering who this third person is. If Gacheru trusts this person, would he
approve of the letter? He could have asked this person to send it to me. So why
not introduce me? What's the reason for keeping this person's identity secret?
As always, my mind considers the worst. If this is a ploy by Sheffield to test
whether or not I am still subject to their mind control, seeking out this third
person could be nothing more than a trap.
I know three cans means three people are outside
the boundaries of brainwashing. I know the third can was unopened more than a
week ago. I'm making an assumption here. If Gacheru kept all three cans, this
third person ingested the drink after I consumed mine. He would not need to
wait till I arrived to give the drink to this person, which means this third
person is likely one of the seven people who traveled with me in the van. I'm
sure I can nail it down even more. I know this person is aware of the
twenty-five billion dollars I stole. By process of elimination it can only be
one of three people, and two of them I'm responsible for bringing to Sheffield.
Shipley and Jayden. Tasi is the only other person in the room with us when the
hunt for the twenty-five-billion-dollar search took place. I can constrict it
more. Since I'm in the men's dorm building, it can only be Shipley or Jayden.
The doorknob twists. My heart is catapulted into
my throat. Is it the R.A.T. SQUADS coming to drag me away so I can be tortured?
Is it Shipley or Jayden?
I hold my breath.
REVIEW:
The
Coterie Declaration
Richard
McClain
4.5
Reviewed
by Tamara White
From
the first page Richard McClain’s novel The Coterie Declaration the reader is
thrust into Dakarai’s high anxiety speechless world. Darkarai’s complicated
reality over flows with suspense, action, and danger. The entire novel moves at
a thrilling neck breaking speed. When Dakarai’s magnanimous actions plunge him
into a plea deal where he quickly finds out he is going to lose more than his
freedom. Dakarai is a complex character that is fighting to not only survive
the Sheffield Academy but also his every present anxiety. Sheffield Academy is
a place where the rules on paper are not the rules that are followed. As the
reader is drawn further and further into Dakarai’s world the characters that
surround him become more shady and much more corrupt. While Dakarai does not
speak with words McClain does a great job of creating intense scenes that allow
Dakarai’s actions to speak for him. Allowing the reader to explore
Dakarai’s thoughts also gives the reader get a deeper understanding of the mute
teenager. Even when The Coterie Declaration ends the reader know it’s not over.
REVIEW:
Title: The
Coterie-Declaration
Author: Richard C. McClain
II
Rating: 4.5
Reviewer: J.C.
Young Dak, the socially
reclusive mute and estranged teenage son of a multi-billionaire tech magnate,
is a gifted hacker who hacks into multi-national banks to steal and
redistribute money to charitable intuitions and organizations; a somewhat
modern-day Robin Hood.
Dak is caught by the
conniving FBI agent, Yarbrough, who convinces Dak to plead and be sentenced to
a so-called rich-kid reform school, Sheffield, where he soon becomes a pawn in
a sinister plot to help a secret organization steal something from Easter Island.
Along the way, only able to communicate with the aid of a whiteboard, Dak comes
into connection with several characters including shady government officials, a
couple attractive young girls that Dak becomes infatuated with, the so-called
R.A.T SQUAD—Sheffield’s brutal young security force—and other student-inmates,
all of whom have secrets and pieces of the puzzle Dak needs in order to figure
out what is going on.
With Dak’s social
awkwardness, his muteness, and inability to form friendships, Dak struggles to
survive and obtain clues as to not only the fate of his roommate—the only one
he really trusted who is found hanged in a tree—but to uncover this secrete
Coterie and their plans.
The Coterie Declaration
begins with the action-packed FBI pursuit of Dak after he attempts to hack into
a major bank. The action and intrigue continues at a fast pace and the reader
turns the pages in continued anticipation of what will happen next, or where it
is that this story is going. The reader empathizes with the young Dak,
estranged from his wealthy father, and roots for him to not only survive, but
to put a stop to the secret plans of the Coterie Declaration.
"Consider this, before the story
is ever heard, it is active, pulsating, and full of passion. It needs but the
storyteller to tell it."
Welcome to the Angel's blog. I hope you have a great tour. Allana Angel
ReplyDeleteI was intrigued by this book and am so pleased to watch this tour in progress!
ReplyDelete