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A Novel
by Laila LalamiREAD WITH JENNA BOOK CLUB PICK AS FEATURED ON TODAY ● From Laila Lalami—the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award finalist and a "maestra of literary fiction" (NPR)—comes a riveting and utterly original novel about one woman's fight for freedom, set in a near future where even dreams are under surveillance.
Sara has just landed at LAX, returning home from a conference abroad, when agents from the Risk Assessment Administration pull her aside and inform her that she will soon commit a crime. Using data from her dreams, the RAA's algorithm has determined that she is at imminent risk of harming the person she loves most: her husband. For his safety, she must be kept under observation for twenty-one days.
The agents transfer Sara to a retention center, where she is held with other dreamers, all of them women trying to prove their innocence from different crimes. With every deviation from the strict and ever-shifting rules of the facility, their stay is extended. Months pass and Sara seems no closer to release. Then one day, a new resident arrives, disrupting the order of the facility and leading Sara on a collision course with the very companies that have deprived her of her freedom.
Eerie, urgent, and ceaselessly clear-eyed, The Dream Hotel artfully explores the seductive nature of technology, which puts us in shackles even as it makes our lives easier. Lalami asks how much of ourselves must remain private if we are to remain free, and whether even the most invasive forms of surveillance can ever capture who we really are.
Excerpt
The Dream Hotel
by Laila Lalami
The dream cedes to reality, or perhaps it's the other way around, and she pulls herself from the tangle of sheets and stumbles out into the hallway. There she waits, barefoot on the cold floor, until the bell stops ringing. She stands still, limbs straight, eyes fixed on a point in the middle distance; if Madison has taught her anything, it is that compliance begins in the body. The trick is to hide any flicker of personality or hint of difference. From white domes on the ceiling, the cameras watch.
The others line up alongside her, rubbing sleep from their eyes, squinting under the chrome-plated lights. The fixtures date back to 1939, when Madison was a public elementary school, enrolling as many as four hundred children every fall. Back then, the town of Ellis had a farming-tool factory, a movie theater, a thriving pool hall, two modest hotels, and natural hot springs that attracted tourists from ninety miles away in Los Angeles. A century later, ...
Dystopian Fiction
...ews/index.cfm/start_id/7/ezine_preview_number/20256/the-dream-hotel#reader_reviews What do readers think of The Dream Hotel? What do readers think of The Dream Hotel by Laila Lalami? Write your own review.
-nick
What book or books are you reading this week? (01/16/2025)
I just finished Laila Lalami's The Dream Hotel. I can't stop thinking about it. It permeates every aspect of the current news cycle, in other words, the state of the world today.
-Ann_Beman
I had been feeling lately that books and movies just are not original anymore until I read Laila Lalami's The Dream Hotel. This book was so frighteningly real, even though it's set in a futuristic society (Kathy W). A single book can profoundly affect our emotions and how we view the world around us. The Dream Hotel by Laila Lalami is such a book (Regina S). Would shelve this alongside Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale or George Orwell's 1984 for its thought-provoking premise (Karen B)...continued
Full Review
(546 words)
(Reviewed by First Impressions Reviewers).
Laila Lalami's The Dream Hotel takes place in a dystopian future in which government surveillance extends to dreams, and people can be arrested for being deemed a risk to society based on their supposed likelihood of committing a crime. The concept of "pre-crime," or the idea that crimes can be anticipated before they occur, was also famously explored in Philip K. Dick's "The Minority Report."
But while both of these stories are set in a fictional dystopia, Lalami points out in an interview that pre-crime is and has been part of our society for a long time: "When I tell people that I wrote a novel in which algorithmic prediction of crimes plays a central part, they immediately respond, oh, so you're writing a dystopia. But pre-...
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