Imagine a world ravaged by gun violence and environmental
damage, where a huge corporation that sells everything to everyone and delivers
the items by drone limits the choices of where you can live and work. In Rob Hart’s The Warehouse, the giant company Cloud
has put other retailers out of business and become the only place to work.
Paxton and Zinnia pass the test and start their jobs. Paxton ends up in
security; Zinnia works long days racing against the clock, picking items to mail to customers. They work at
Cloud. They eat at Cloud. They sleep at Cloud. Zinnia puts up with sexual
harassment from a manager; Paxton competes against others for the approval of
his boss.
But neither Zinnia nor Paxton is who they seem. Each is
keeping secrets, and each has an agenda. However, it’s not easy to stand up for
yourself when you are a tiny cog in the Cloud.
The Warehouse is likely to be this year’s big, almost-there dystopian novel. And it all feels like it could come true next week.
Rob Hart dedicated his book to Maria Fernandes, a woman who
worked part-time at several Dunkin’Donuts to make ends meet and who died from
gas fumes while taking a nap in her car. In the meantime, Dunkin’ CEO Nigel
Travis earned $10.2 million the year she died. The Warehouse is not a perfect book, but it will make you think hard
about the relationship between corporations and their employees and about income inequality.
I read an advance reader copy of The Warehouse, which comes out on August 20. The Galesburg Public Library will have it in print and as an ebook.
I read an advance reader copy of The Warehouse, which comes out on August 20. The Galesburg Public Library will have it in print and as an ebook.
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