Five Star Week continues.
Reviewed by: BigAl
Genre: Dystopia
Approximate word count: 60-65,000 words
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Author:
Teri Hall
lives in Washington State with her two cats and a dog. She’s the author of two
other books, The Line and Away, which are the first two books in a
traditionally published YA Fantasy series. She was supposed to be writing the
third in that series, but current events moved her to take time out to write
and self publish this first.
Description:
“It's 2052,
and there's one less state in the union. Texas, now known as the Republic of
Texas, has seceded, just like it did in 1861, though for different reasons this
time.
Rebecca
lives in New Zapata, a border town in The Republic of Texas. She's nineteen
years old, born and raised in the R of T, and doesn't remember a time when
things were different, though her Aunt Cathy does. Rebecca's married to Chad,
the boy who charmed her into an unplanned pregnancy. She loves her young son,
Luke, but she almost died giving birth to him.
That means
Rebecca has a problem. Because in New Zapata, birth control and abortion are
illegal. So is divorce. And Chad thinks sex is his husbandly right.”
Appraisal:
Dystopian
fiction, besides taking place in a society that is the opposite of a utopia,
typically explores some of the reasons that things are so bad. An example
familiar to many is Orwell’s Nineteen
Eight-Four. Usually these reasons are related to current real world issues
and extrapolate what the results of continuing in a particular direction might
be. New Zapata does exactly that,
taking aim at recent attempts in the US to decrease the rights women have over
their own reproductive systems.
When a
novel takes a political stance, which is almost always going to be the case
with this genre, and it’s on a current issue where emotions run high, as with
this one, some authors focus too hard on making their case and not hard enough
on telling the story well. When that happens, even if the reader’s politics
make them sympathetic to the message, the book is still going to be a failure.
I’ve previously read two books that attempted to tackle this same issue. In
spite of agreeing with the authors’ politics and wanting them to be successful
making their point, both those books fell short. New Zapata didn’t. There are several reasons why.
The most
obvious reason this story worked is the author resisted the urge to preach and
concentrated on telling the story. The premise didn’t stretch credibility too
far (I’d guess there are even a fair number of people who think this result
would be a good one). How women reacted was very believable, not unlike how
different oppressed groups have reacted in other places and times. I loved the characters,
especially Rebecca and her aunt, was pulling for them, and the story got me
thinking. Can’t ask for more than that.
Format/Typo Issues:
Very few
issues although there is a consistent problem with using the word current, as in right now, instead of the
word currant (a dried fruit you eat).
Rating: ***** Five stars
1 comment:
Loved this story . . . insightful, engaging, and thought provoking by a very creative and talented author.
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