What if marriage was the law? Dare you disobey?
Britain. The near-future. A right-wing government believes it has the answer to society's ills — the Sanctity of Marriage Act, which actively encourages marriage as the norm, punishing those who choose to remain single.
But four couples are about to discover just how impossible relationships can be when the government is monitoring every aspect of our personal lives — monitoring every word, every minor disagreement — and will use every tool in its arsenal to ensure everyone will love, honor and obey.
Title : The Marriage Act
Author : John Marrs
Format : eARC
Page Count : 432
Genre : dystopian / sci-fi / thriller
Publisher : Hanover Square Press
Release Date : May 2, 2023
Reviewer : Hollis
Rating : ★ ★
Hollis' 2 star review
This might very well be a "it's not you, it's me" thing because I was so hooked by this premise but so little of it satisfied. Infact, I found the whole thing to be bleak and un-fun. And yes, I mean, if you read the plot you might think of course it's bleak, of course it won't be fun, but I think there could've been a way to have all these themes, these events, and not come away feeling as I do.
Naturally, we aren't about to root for the system that's been set-up in this near-future world. But you'd think we would have some characters, or some situations, to root for. Except the only one who was really deserving.. well. He has the most heartbreaking plotline. Everyone else, even those who weren't sociopaths or narcissists, they were all somehow complicit or hypocritical and while there's something to be said for shades of grey, complicated personas, well.. yeah. I guess there's something to be said. But not here.
Because much of what is found in his society, the Smart devices, the Smart homes, etc, already exists in ours, it's not hard to make the leap that the rest could one day be true, too. Already we see the push to control others, to dictate what's acceptable, so why wouldn't this be the next step? It does make you think. But I guess I expected to feel something, too. And I didn't.
I think if you like an Orwellian dystopian world, especially one that feels just a half-step away, with various POVs that slowly overlap in subtle ways, you might enjoy this. And while I can't count myself among them, I try this author again.
** I received an ARC from the publisher (thank you!) in exchange for an honest review. **
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