Editorial Review For Obedience Protocol


https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0G1JLG7FS/

Editorial Review For Obedience Protocol

The story follows Julian, a child shaped by secret programs and strange symbols, who grows into a man chased by the same system that made him. The plot moves between past and present. It shows how belief, fear, and control get baked into people early. A state built on order pushes obedience as healing. Resistance grows in quiet rooms, burned files, and stolen moments. Symbols repeat. So does the damage they cause.

The book shines at scale. It handles big systems without losing track of people inside them. The structure lets the reader see cause and effect over time. The use of symbols works like a pressure test on belief. The machine voice, later in the story, lands harder because it learned from humans first. That irony sticks. The tension remains steady, even when the action slows.

This firmly falls into dystopian science fiction. It leans into political thrillers and the fear of near-future tech. It also taps into current worries about surveillance, belief shaping, and algorithmic control. The story fits with books that question who gets to name truth and who pays for it.

Readers who like slow-burning tension will feel at home here. People drawn to resistance stories will too. If you enjoy systems breaking under their own logic, this will work for you. If you like your science fiction with ideas first and explosions second, this fits.

This book does not ask for comfort. It asks for attention and is packed with big ideas and high tension. It rewards readers who stay alert and connect the dots. Recommended for anyone who likes their dystopia pointed and a little too close to home.