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GODDESS IN THE MACHINE by Lora Beth Johnson

GODDESS IN THE MACHINE

From the Goddess in the Machine series, volume 1

by Lora Beth Johnson

Pub Date: June 30th, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-9848-3592-5
Publisher: Razorbill/Penguin

A girl wakes up from cryogenic sleep in an unrecognizable world.

In 2161 Andra went into stasis for space travel to a new colony. When handsome-yet-snarky Zhade wakes her on an unexpectedly devastated desert world, she learns she’s overslept—by around a thousand years. Worshipped as the last of the three goddesses (the other two having already woken), Andra’s expected to save the world. Along with differences between the world she knew and the one she awoke in, evolution of the English language into a futuristic dialect adds to her disorientation. While heavy use of this device will likely polarize readers, the dialect goes beyond a sprinkling of slang, possessing a strong intuitive internal logic, an authentic-feeling rhythm, and, sometimes, amusing origins. The characters aren’t quite as successful as the prose—love-interest Zhade is pretty stock for YA, and at times reading about Andra’s needing to be rescued gets old. Once readers (and Andra) get their bearings in Zhade’s storyline and Andra’s role, a series of twists and curveballs amps up stakes and tension, carrying the plot to its sequel-promising conclusion. Zhade is coded as white; Andra is fat and cued as biracial (with a redheaded mother and Hokkien-speaking grandmother); the world has diversity in skin tone, and Andra notes that those at the top tend to be lighter skinned.

An exceptionally ambitious debut from an author to watch.

(Science fiction. 12-adult)