Pa'nop'ti'con (noun). A circular prison with cells so constructed that the prisoners can be observed at all times. [ Greek panoptos 'seen by all'] Anais Hendricks fifteen is in the back of a police car headed for the Panopticon a home for chronic young offenders. She can't remember the events that led her here but across town a policewoman lies in a coma & there is blood on Anais' school uniform. Smart funny & fierce Anais is a counter-culture outlaw a bohemian philosopher in sailor shorts & a pillbox hat. She is also a child who has been let down or worse by just about every adult she has ever met. The residents of the Panopticon form intense bonds heightened by their place on the periphery & Anais finds herself part of an ad hoc family there. Much more suspicious are the social workers especially Helen who is about to leave her job for an elephant sanctuary in India but is determined to force Anais to confront the circumstances of her birth before she goes. Looking up at the watchtower that looms over the residents Anais knows her fate: she is part of an experiment she always was it's a given a liberty
- a fact. & the experiment is closing in. In language dazzling energetic & pure The Panopticon" introduces us to a heartbreaking young heroine & an incredibly assured & outstanding new voice in fiction."