“I didn’t do anything.” In a whisper this time.
Lucy nods. “Right. But what’d they say you were going to do?” [loc. 400]
Historian Sara Hussein, returning from a conference in London and eager to see her husband and their two small children, is detained by authorities at LAX. Her risk score -- the likelihood of her committing a crime in the near future -- has been calculated as over 500, marking her as a potential threat to her family. She's sent to a retention centre ('not a prison or a jail') known as Madison, for 21 days of forensic observation.
Nearly a year later, she's still there.
There are several contributory factors to Sara's 'retention': she's Moroccan-American, and she was impatient with the airport security officers. Most significantly, though, she has a Dreamsaver implant, which improves sleep quality and depth (invaluable for a mother of young children) -- and also (as mentioned in the small print of the EULA) records the dreams of the user. That data is just one of the two hundred inputs to the Risk Assessment Administration's crime-prediction algorithm. Since some of Sara's dreams involve violence against, or happening to, her husband, she's deemed a potential threat to him.
The Dream Hotel is set in the near future: far enough ahead that there are cures for lung cancer and dementia, close enough that it reminded me all too vividly of current immigration detention cases in the US. In the novel, the RAA was set up after another mass shooting: 'Democratic lawmakers called [it] a “watershed moment” and demanded strict gun control, while Republicans ... argue[d] that the fault lay solely with the gunman' [loc. 790]. The RAA's algorithm has reduced US gun deaths by 42.6% in two decades, and suicides by 48%. It's spoken of as 'knowing people better than they know themselves.' And it doesn't like outliers like Sara and the other women at Madison.
I bought this at full price after reading a couple of reviews, and found it immensely readable and ... not quite 'enjoyable', but ... satisfying? Scary and dystopian, but with a spirit of cooperation. 'Isolation is the opposite of salvation,' Sara thinks near the end of The Dream Hotel. It's collective action that makes things change: for Sara, for us.
Historians observe the world, and scientists try to explain it, but engineers transform it. Step by step, they’ve replaced village matchmakers with dating apps, town criers with social media, local doctors with diagnostic tools. The time has come for sages, mystics, and prophets to cede to an AI. [loc. 1486]