by Charles Bastille ‧ RELEASE DATE: N/A
A bracing dystopian tale that deftly mixes magic, evolution, and romance.
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A debut post-apocalyptic novel presents a fateful encounter between two young people from different sides of a catastrophic war.
Thousands of years in the future, Earth suffers the ill effects of a long-standing war, and evolution has taken humans to new heights and diverse branches. The surviving few live on opposite sides of the planet: some in The Homeland, where citizens permanently uplink to the Stoven collective, and others in Moria, where magic reigns supreme. When a young man from The Homeland named Belex Deralk-Almd crashes on Moria, all his biosystems are disconnected; his memory is fuzzy; and, to his horror, he finds himself trapped in “MagicLand,” where savage people disavow science and embrace aging and death. But he also discovers, in the midst of all the ugliness, “a mystical, hidden factor of beauty that restrained his hatred.” One of those beauties is 17-year-old Aurilena, a gifted magician. When she finds the crash survivor, she is immediately wary of this potential enemy, but she is also attracted to his differences. Against all odds, Belex and Aurilena start to fall for each other. As they investigate why Belex is in Moria, they realize not only that everything they know about their respective cultures is a lie, but that they have roles to play in the next step of their evolution as well. In this promising first novel, Bastille introduces a world that features a surprisingly well-balanced mishmash of genres with robust elements of SF, fantasy, and romance all wrapped up in a post-apocalyptic package. From Belex’s relationship with his body’s augmentations to Aurilena’s empathic connection to Moria, the absorbing story examines the seemingly conflicting ways these new types of humans engage with the world, suggesting a balance can be found. But Moria’s magic system comes with strong religious undertones that become progressively prevalent toward the tale’s open-ended climax. Readers will enjoy trying to spot the truth in the novel’s unreliable narrative about war and history while navigating Belex’s lack of memory and Aurilena’s reliance on disputable sources.
A bracing dystopian tale that deftly mixes magic, evolution, and romance.Pub Date: N/A
ISBN: 978-1-63195-564-8
Page Count: 270
Publisher: Morgan James Publishing
Review Posted Online: June 3, 2021
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Ellery Lloyd ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 12, 2021
Silence your notifications and lock the doors, then indulge in this delightfully distasteful, cozily creepy thriller.
A British "Instamum" navigates the dangers of fame—and finds herself the target of a killer.
Former fashion editor Emmy Jackson traded her magazine cred for Instagram fame with her first pregnancy. Now her life is more breastfeeding than brunches, and she works hard to convince her tribe of eager mamas that she’s barely keeping up—just one of the many myths she's constantly perpetuating. In truth, she has to be savvy and tough, three steps ahead of everyone else, commiserating with the sleepless one minute, plugging one of her sponsors—perhaps a toilet paper company?—the next. Her husband begins to feel like his wife is always performing, like he barely knows her anymore, especially when she turns their 4-year-old daughter’s birthday party into a public event or ignores her best friend’s messages with a wave. But when their daughter temporarily disappears at the mall and then there’s a break-in at their flat, they begin to worry that the price of Emmy’s fame might just be too high. Someone is posting stolen pictures; someone else is watching and waiting for the opportunity to take revenge. The first half of the novel is a delicious guilty pleasure: hyperbolic descriptions of the glamorous superficiality that we all suspect lies at the heart of most Instagram lives and experiences. But the second half takes us to a darker place as Lloyd explores the pitfalls of living a life on the internet, especially when that life involves kids. How can we ever assume privacy and safety? And when does the line between persona and person no longer exist? Despite a rather melodramatic climax and rushed conclusion, this one will get under your skin.
Silence your notifications and lock the doors, then indulge in this delightfully distasteful, cozily creepy thriller.Pub Date: Jan. 12, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-06-299739-5
Page Count: 304
Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins
Review Posted Online: Oct. 5, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2020
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by Ellery Lloyd
by Marisa Crane ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 17, 2023
An anthem for queer love and solidarity that rises above the dystopian cacophony.
An intimate, poetic debut that explores the complexities of grief and parenting set against the backdrop of an American surveillance state.
In the near future, prisons have been abolished, but a governmental entity known as the Department of Balance has installed surveillance cameras in every home, and a tyrannical president recently instituted a policy that punishes wrongdoers by giving them additional shadows, ostensibly to keep them accountable for their crimes by serving as constant reminders of their mistakes. These Shadesters are forced to live as second-class citizens, stripped of their civil rights and freedoms. Once a school social worker, the narrator, Kris, now sells self-help programs called mindcasts while trying to distract herself from the grief of her wife's death through watching reality television, drinking, and listing all the creatures she can think of with exoskeletons. The only thing that gives Kris the will to live through her devastation is her determination to raise her daughter, the precocious and imaginative Bear, who was born with a second shadow. Driven by Kris’ internal monologue, which is often addressed to the imagined presence of her wife, the novel candidly explores the anguish of grief while remaining deeply insightful and often bitingly funny, at times making asides in the form of wry pop quizzes and word searches. Reminiscent of the tenderly ironic confessional voice of Melissa Broder’s novels and the rendering of an eclectic community's search for connection and survival in Emily St. John Mandel's Station Eleven (2014), this novel skillfully probes the complexities of loss, love, and injustice. Writing fiction that convincingly leans toward hope is a challenging task, but Crane does so with self-assured, muscular grace.
An anthem for queer love and solidarity that rises above the dystopian cacophony.Pub Date: Jan. 17, 2023
ISBN: 978-1-64622-129-5
Page Count: 352
Publisher: Catapult
Review Posted Online: Oct. 25, 2022
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2022
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