
Blurb
In near-future NewBrit, where only Winners succeed, Maz Tallis is a Loser. All she wants is the expensive medicine that could save her half-brother, Kyle.
As her final term at Albion House Academy begins, Maz enters the Manticore Challenge, a competition offering the winner 1,000 Life Chances—credits that can be exchanged for life-saving treatments. For Maz, this could be her only shot at getting the medication Kyle so desperately needs.
To improve her chances of winning, Maz comes up with a bold plan. But when Felix, a charismatic Winner, steals her idea, they become fierce rivals. To make matters worse, Kyle gets a superbug, making the need for treatment even more urgent.
As Maz uncovers a disturbing secret at the heart of the competition, she faces an agonising dilemma: save her brother or expose the threat. Battling self-doubt and a corrupt system, Maz must decide if she will risk everything to reveal the truth. And will she find a way to save the people she loves without losing herself?
Review
When I read challenge and competition in the blurb, I immediately thought of other stories with physical games with consequences…this is different. The challenge set is to action an idea that will benefit society as a whole. Which is all well and good if there is not corruption and all eyes on you.
Set in a dystopian future, for the students at Albion House Academy most of their lives are lived out on social media and tv, even their exams are broadcast…with all the coverage, their exam results and their social media following (or lack of) used to judge them.
However, it is not just the students at Albion House that are pitted against each other. The sensationalist host of the People’s Choice programme is in a battle to save his popularity, ratings and his job, so is even more brutal and conniving than usual. He stops at nothing to humiliate the students.
The author has used this premise convincingly well to cover huge themes of racism, class systems, immigration, corporate greed, power as well as making us consider why wishing you had things others have is not as positive as you think. One part of the storyline also considers with how far some people are willing to go to save themselves, at a harsh cost to both themselves and others.
The world building is excellent, the characters are believable and deep and the story is superbly paced, keeping the action going, whilst at the same time getting the messages across about corruption, perception, humanity (or lack of, in some cases) and love.
I am looking forward to the next part of the story, as the ending leaves no doubt there is more to come from Maz and her friends.
Thank you to @The_WriteReads and the author for a copy of the book to review for this tour. Please look out for other blogs in the coming days.

About the book
Genre: Speculative Fiction, Dystopian Fiction
Age Category: Young Adult
Number of Pages: 312 Pages
Publication Date: April 28, 2025
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/230923900-people-s-choice
Storygraph: https://app.thestorygraph.com/books/6ace0b62-6d07-45e6-88da-c450606b97e0
Amazon: https://a.co/d/5mwdhrT (Canada) https://a.co/d/1evlxxk (USA) https://amzn.eu/d/fl4U6Z5 (UK)














