A small plane crashes in the Alaskan wilderness, and stowaways Emily Perez and her younger brother, Aidan, struggle to stay alive.
Trekking across the frozen mountains with a little kid and a hurt pilot requires Emily to use all the skills she has learned from her hardy, outdoorsy parents. Above all, it is imperative to keep Aidan alive, especially when the mysterious men come after them, shooting to kill. Because Aidan is not Emily’s brother at all: He is from outer space, and he is lost on Earth. Aidan also has the power, a useful survival mechanism, to make people want to love and protect him, and Emily will do anything to help him go back home. Lake’s story combines adrenaline-driven survival with a poignant examination of Emily’s ongoing anger toward her family; she feels they don’t truly understand or support her. The novel skirts deeper necessary conversations not only about Aidan’s power to override people’s memories and whether real love can grow from it, but also some of Emily’s actions during their escape. However, the overall message about connecting and empathy is deeply felt, as is Emily’s coming-of-age and understanding of her place in the universe as a young woman with her own voice. Emily’s grandparents came from El Salvador and Germany; most characters are assumed white.
A heady, if uneven, mix of science fiction and thriller with contemporary issues.
(Science fiction. 14-18)