The Dream Hotel
Longlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction 2025
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:4th Mar '25
Should be back in stock very soon

A gripping, inventive and terrifying speculative mystery about privacy, freedom and survival – from the Pulitzer Prize and Booker Prize nominated author
* LONGLISTED FOR THE WOMEN'S PRIZE FOR FICTION 2025 *
* A READ WITH JENNA BOOK CLUB PICK MARCH 2025 *
‘A gripping, Kafkaesque foray into an all-too-plausible future’ JENNIFER EGAN
‘So cleverly conceived, so relevant, that everyone should read it and sweat’ THE TIMES
‘Extraordinary’ RUMAAN ALAM
‘Absolutely unputdownable’ SANDRA NEWMAN
Sara is returning home from a conference abroad when agents from the Risk Assessment Administration pull her aside at the airport. Using data from her dreams, their algorithm has determined that she is at imminent risk of harming her husband. For his safety, she must be transferred to a retention centre, and kept under observation for twenty-one days.
But as Sara arrives to be monitored alongside other dangerous dreamers, she discovers that with every deviation from the facility’s strict and ever-shifting rules, their stays can be extended – and that getting home to her family is going to cost much more than just three weeks of good behaviour.
Then, one day, a new resident arrives, disrupting the order of the facility and leading Sara on a collision course with the very companies that have deprived her of her freedom.
The Dream Hotel is a gripping speculative mystery about the seductive dangers of the technologies that are supposed to make our lives easier. As terrifying as it is inventive, it explores how well we can ever truly know those around us – even with the most invasive surveillance systems in place.
Reading The Dream Hotel is a physical experience: it’s rare for a novel to induce so strong a sense of powerlessness and frustration ... In this sharp, sophisticated novel of forecasts and insightful takes, what I found most powerful was the great bewilderment that the characters share ... Perhaps you wouldn’t ordinarily pick up a novel in search of an experience of confusion. But The Dream Hotel has a burning quality, both in its swift, consuming escalation – you can’t look away – and in the clarity and purpose of what it shows * Guardian *
Laila Lalami’s brilliant and anxiety-provoking novel The Dream Hotel ... makes you question why we aren’t doing more to protect our privacy right now -- Ann Patchett, author of TOM LAKE and THE DUTCH HOUSE * TheSkimm *
Well-written, meticulously conceived, richly characterised and terrifying as hell. It’s just close enough to be imaginable ... She’s a master storyteller, Lalami, and I can’t work out why she isn’t better known. The Dream Hotel just made the long-list for The Women’s Prize, so hopefully she will be soon -- Pandora Sykes * Books and Bits *
A gripping new novel ... Intriguing * Economist *
The Dream Hotel is so cleverly conceived, so relevant, that everyone should read it and sweat ... It gave me a lot to chew on. Next time I download an app, I’ll be scrutinising the terms of service. Because any of us can fall foul of the algorithm * The Times *
In the current political and technological climate and the seemingly endless colonisation of data, Lalami has managed to tap into the human psyche on a level that everybody can relate to.The Dream Hotel can deservedly and comfortably sit somewhere between Phillip K Dick’s Minority Report and Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale. A powerhouse of a book that will live long in the memory * Buzz *
If you’re concerned, as I am, about surveillance, data-mining, mass incarceration, a misogynistic autocracy run by rogue technocrats – or if you simply like an engrossing, well-written novel – The Dream Hotel is your book. In her fifth novel, the Moroccan-born Laila Lalami has created a substantive, chilling near-future and compelled her vivid, sympathetic characters to live in it * Washington Post *
Addictive * Sunday Post *
A captivating imaginative feat, taking our familiar world and carefully nudging it just a few degrees closer to the nightmarishly plausible consequences of constant, inescapable surveillance * Irish Times *
With its tense and engrossing narrative, The Dream Hotel is both a page turner and a salutary warning about putting our trust in big tech * Press Association *
I love this book so much ... I read it in a weekend. I could not put it down. It is really relevant. It’s a meditation on free will, sisterhood, the power of love, and the power of hope. It’s so good -- Jenna Bush Hager * TODAY *
Skewers notions of supposed privacy and freedom ... [A] gripping allegory for our times * Observer *
She can world-build with the best of them * Daily Mail *
With its tense and engrossing narrative, The Dream Hotel is both a page turner and a salutary warning about putting our trust in big tech * Irish News *
The world in Lalami’s novel feels one step away from ours, which makes it astonishingly easy to slip inside. The women in The Dream Hotel grapple with the ways in which capitalism and technology sell off the pieces of ourselves most personal, most vulnerable, most private. A thrilling, urgent and large-hearted novel that I can’t wait to press upon other readers -- Kelly Link, author of THE BOOK OF LOVE
I was utterly gripped, caught up, as if I was living the same nightmare as Sara. It felt terrifyingly and convincingly close -- Esther Freud
A terrifying, thought-provoking and timely exploration of the inevitable march of algorithms and data-harvesting into our innermost lives. The Dream Hotel offers not only a real-feeling diorama of an extensively-surveilled prison population, but a masterclass in the art of cortisol-raising - to be filed alongside The Trial and The School for Good Mothers -- Jo Harkin
The Dream Hotel offers a stark vision of the future – in which America is a surveillance state, ruled by the intertwined forces of capital and government, powered by an all-too-fallible algorithm that determines criminality based on citizen’s dreams. That’s plainly a metaphor for extant practices of social control, but Laila Lalami’s extraordinary new novel is more than just a political warning; the book is an exploration of the psyche itself, the strange ungovernable forces of fate and emotion that make us human -- Rumaan Alam, bestselling author of LEAVE THE WORLD BEHIND
A gripping, Kafkaesque foray into an all-too-plausible future where data collection penetrates interior life, The Dream Hotel is also an elegant meditation on identity, motherhood, and what we sacrifice, unthinkingly, for the sake of convenience -- Jennifer Egan, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of THE CANDY HOUSE
A thought provoking and compellingly plausible novel. Totally immersive and unputdownable -- John Marrs
Absolutely unputdownable. Lalami's protagonist is flawed in ways that frustrate and panic us partly because they're so relatable: these are the mistakes we would end up making; this is how we would find ourselves the victims of the new security technologies that promise to keep us safe. It's also a great work about the warped logic of mass incarceration; a sci-fi take on The Mars Room for the era of ubiquitous surveillance. This is one I'll be thinking about for a long time. -- Sandra Newman
Stellar ... There are echoes of The Handmaid’s Tale here – as Margaret Atwood does in that book, Lalami builds a convincing near-future dystopia out of current events ... But Lalami’s scenario is unique and well-imagined – interspersed report sheets, transcripts, and terms-of-service lingo have a realistic, poignant lyricism that exposes the cruel bureaucracy in which Sara is trapped ... And the story exposes the particular perniciousness of big tech’s capacity to exploit our every movement, indeed practically every thought ... Striking ... An engrossing and troubling dystopian tale * Kirkus *
Chilling ... A smart dystopia buzzing with killer detail * Mail on Sunday *
Powerful, richly conceived ... Here, rendering this edge-of-nightmare world, Lalami skates along at the height of her powers as a writer of intelligent, complex characters ... Within the latter part of the novel, it’s not the stuff of tragedy or alarm about the human condition we encounter, but surprising, unadulterated hope * Los Angeles Times *
Unsettling, meticulously observed ... An alarmingly likely approximation of what we’re all careering toward. Lalami has peered into the future and found that it looks like nothing so much as the present – which is to say dingy, corrupt, dumb, and dishonourable. And terrifying * Vulture *
One of the best high-concept hooks of the year ... It feels like a mix between Steven Spielberg’s Minority Report and Wim Wender’s Until the End of the World, written in Lalami’s silky and celebrated prose * Esquire *
The Dream Hotel is a story about the consequences of unchecked power and the small acts of resistance an individual can undertake to fight an unfair system. Sometimes fiction is the best way to look at the terrifying truth and we can use it as a manual to guide us * Boston Globe *
Wielding the masterful skills of a Pulitzer Prize finalist, Lalami writes a fifth novel and first foray into dystopia that is especially resonant and provocative in an age when surveillance and data collection are increasingly ingrained in our society * Alta *
Author Laila Lalami was previously a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for her novel The Moor’s Account, and her writing in The Dream Hotel is just as vibrant and fascinating. She has a natural gift for capturing the everyday moments that draw readers in quickly and hold their attention, and her characters could easily be real, and familiar, people * Pittsburgh Post-Gazette *
Lalami’s keen insight into our less-than-free society is also reflected in The Dream Hotel’s discussion and engagement with data ... The Dream Hotel does not feel like science fiction but rather a commentary on a near future that seems frighteningly close, just out of view * Pop Matters *
The novel of our tech present and future * Chicago Review of Books *
Lalami’s bracingly resonant drama strikes at the very heart of the consumer privacy debate and the freedoms people forfeit to data-hungry conglomerates when we use their products * Shelf Awareness *
This generation’s 1984 * Shoreline of Infinity *
A chilling exploration of technology’s dual nature, offering convenience while quietly imprisoning us * Geek Girl Authority *
Lalami delivers a stirring dystopian tale of dwindling privacy and freedom in the digital age ... Chillingly original, echoing widespread fears about the abuse of surveillance technology, and she balances high-concept speculative elements with deep character work. This surreal story feels all too plausible * Publishers Weekly *
Explores predictive policing and what is lost when people choose the promise of safety over individual freedom. Fans of The Minority Report by Philip K. Dick will enjoy this literary novel set in the near future * Booklist *
ISBN: 9781526685193
Dimensions: 236mm x 160mm x 32mm
Weight: 542g
336 pages