In Resau’s SF novel, a teenage girl travels to a tropical island to learn the secrets behind a tech empire and save her dying sister in the process.
The year is 2154 and 16-year-old Liv is on a mission to save her younger sister, Shell. Sickened by living in a “contaminated, off-limits zone by the Chesapeake Bay,” Shell is preserved in a state of suspended animation in which she’s “technically dead with the potential for revival.” But in only two months, her “hibernation” will max out and Shell will die forever. This situation compels Liv to join an internship program on a remote island, ostensibly to learn about the dazzling technological advances of the Virch Empire, the tech company responsible for making the virtual-reality lenses almost everyone wears. In reality, however, Liv intends to find a cure for her sister. She finds unexpected help when she meets Wolf, the rogue son of the Virch Empire’s founder. Disillusioned with his father’s work and at odds with his corrupted brother, Spiro, Wolf teams up with Liv as they stumble upon plans for Project Dragon—a horrific bioweapon that could help Wolf’s father gain the immortality he so desperately seeks. With Liv’s visionary lucid dreams guiding the way, she and Wolf struggle to find answers as they become increasingly unsure of what is reality and what is illusion. Resau has created a hero who is smart, determined, and vulnerable—a dynamic combination that is sure to keep readers hooked. While there are some lighthearted moments (high-tech gadgets like the virtual-reality “virchlenses” exist alongside old-fashioned hand sanitizers), the majority of the novel is a tense save-the-world journey leavened by a budding romance. Quick pacing and naturalistic dialogue, along with a series of authentic twists and turns, make for an action-packed yet frequently philosophical look at what makes us human.
An expert blend of SF yarn, thriller, and romance that results in a compulsively readable and imaginative novel.