Formerly a luxury cruise ship, the Arcadia became a refuge for those fleeing Europe after a deadly virus was unleashed during biological warfare in this duology opener.
It’s 2094, and the refugees have been stranded shipboard in the Atlantic for 40 years—the isolationist Federated States, which seceded from the United States, will not admit them. Sixteen-year-old Esther and her boyfriend, Alex, are part of an elite group studying to be medics who will have the opportunity to work on land. Esther lives in her grandparents’ former honeymoon cabin with her parents and sister, May. Secretly in cahoots with Nikhil, her love interest, May and other renegades strive to liberate the passengers in a large-scale rebellion against Hadley, the ship’s authoritarian commander. Classism and systemic oppression persist, although race does not seem to be a factor, with comfortable upper-level cabins juxtaposed against poverty-ridden passengers known as Neaths who live beneath the waterline, are ruled by gangs, and never see the light of day. Over time the ship has become decrepit and food, scarce. Possession of outside information is cause for arrest. This fast-paced, action-packed, near-future thriller explores social and political issues that feel relevant today. The characters are well fleshed out through chapters that shift between various points of view. Esther’s arc, in particular, embodies an eye-opening journey. A morally gray cloud surrounds many characters, supporting plot twists. Main characters default to White; Nikhil and his family are British Punjabis.
An addictive, original debut that will leave readers clamoring for more.
(Dystopian. 13-18)