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BENEATH THE SHINE

As a retelling of Baroness Orczy’s classic, an enjoyable romantic adventure. As an early entry in what will presumably be a...

The Scarlet Pimpernel relocated to a dystopian United States.

Seventeen-year-old Marguerite Singer is a newly privileged resident of Washington, D.C., in 2069. Her rage-filled, anti-elite vids went megaviral last year, so she was brought into the presidential campaign of populist candidate Wynn Sallese. Now this poor, fatherless, white girl from Houston lives in the nation’s capital, one of the few wealthy havens in a shooting-ravaged, poverty-filled U.S. Marguerite’s classmates, wealthy technocrats, despise her for her role in Sallese’s anti-technocrat campaign. Perhaps, however, their fear isn’t entirely the ridiculous paranoia of the wealthy. As Marguerite studies the French Revolution and the Reign of Terror in school, disturbing parallels spark across Washington. Rich classmates at Clinton Comprehensive Education Academy disappear even as rumors surface of civil liberties violations, torture, and extrajudicial killings. Only one classmate is fearless in the face of tyranny: Percy Blake, the fashion-obsessed, white, femme nephew of the French ambassador, has a secret life as a not-entirely-human rebel. Recognizable characterizations (the self-funding, populist, anti–foreign trade businessman-made-president; the humorless, unlikable, pantsuit-wearing competent woman who cleans up his mess) beg comparisons with current affairs but serve no clear purpose in the narrative.

As a retelling of Baroness Orczy’s classic, an enjoyable romantic adventure. As an early entry in what will presumably be a long string of dark futures inspired by the 2016 presidential campaign, lacking in depth and clarity . (Science fiction. 13-16)

Pub Date: April 18, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-4778-2327-9

Page Count: 342

Publisher: Skyscape

Review Posted Online: Jan. 31, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2017

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10 BLIND DATES

An enjoyable, if predictable, romantic holiday story.

Is an exuberant extended family the cure for a breakup? Sophie is about to find out.

When Sophie unexpectedly breaks up with her boyfriend, she isn’t thrilled about spending the holidays at her grandparents’ house instead of with him. And when her grandmother forms a plan to distract Sophie from her broken heart—10 blind dates, each set up by different family members—she’s even less thrilled. Everyone gets involved with the matchmaking, even forming a betting pool on the success of each date. But will Sophie really find someone to fill the space left by her ex? Will her ex get wind of Sophie’s dating spree via social media and want them to get back together? Is that what she even wants anymore? This is a fun story of finding love, getting to know yourself, and getting to know your family. The pace is quick and light, though the characters are fairly shallow and occasionally feel interchangeable, especially with so many names involved. A Christmas tale, the plot is a fast-paced series of dinners, parties, and games, relayed in both narrative form and via texts, though the humor occasionally feels stiff and overwrought. The ending is satisfying, though largely unsurprising. Most characters default to white as members of Sophie’s Italian American extended family, although one of her cousins has a Filipina mother. One uncle is gay.

An enjoyable, if predictable, romantic holiday story. (Fiction. 13-16)

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-368-02749-6

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Disney-Hyperion

Review Posted Online: June 22, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2019

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THE WARNING

From the Warning series , Vol. 1

A glossy repackaging of a jejune tale.

A reissue of the 2016 novel published as Consider.

Alexandra Lucas and her boyfriend, Dominick, are about to start their senior year of high school when 500 vertexes—each one a doorway-shaped “hole into the fabric of the universe”—appear across the world, accompanied by holographic messages communicating news of Earth’s impending doom. The only escape is a one-way trip through the portals to a parallel future Earth. As people leave through the vertexes and the extinction event draws nearer, the world becomes increasingly unfamiliar. A lot has changed in the past several years, including expectations of mental health depictions in young adult literature; Alex’s struggle with anxiety and reliance on Ativan, which she calls her “little white savior” while initially discounting therapy as an intervention, make for a trite after-school special–level treatment of a complex situation; a short stint of effective therapy does finally occur but is so limited in duration that it contributes to the oversimplification of the topic. Alex also has unresolved issues with her Gulf War veteran father (who possibly grapples with PTSD). The slow pace of the plot as it depicts a crumbling society, along with stilted writing and insubstantial secondary characterization, limits the appeal of such a small-scale, personal story. Characters are minimally described and largely racially ambiguous; Alex has golden skin and curly brown hair.

A glossy repackaging of a jejune tale. (Science fiction. 13-16)

Pub Date: June 6, 2023

ISBN: 978-1-72826-839-2

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Sourcebooks Fire

Review Posted Online: March 13, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2023

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