The Marrow Thieves is the kind of post-apocalyptic dystopian stories that I long for - thoughtful, heart-wrenching, and a reflection of history, present, and the future. This was so so good.
- Set in a world where people no longer dream except for Indigenous people, the story follows Frenchie, an Indigenous teen who, alongside a group of other North American indigenous people, are constantly on the run from a government who is looking for 'unwilling donors' to harvest marrow wherein dreams are kept.
- This is not the 'high octane' and 'action-packed' dystopia. Rather, it's slower and deliberate in pace, and very much centers on the characters. The story unfurls slowly, revealing each character's story before everything fell apart, and each story is heartbreaking and devastating.
- What makes this book so good is that it's an allegory of the violence that indigenous people have experienced across history - the trauma and violence of colonial violence, cultural genocide, residential schools, and that loss of identity and community.
- I really loved this. The book is heavy at times, but there are also fleeting moments of hope. A marvelous and important piece of YA dystopian literature, and I can't wait to read the sequel.
Content warning: death, violence towards indigenous people, mentions and allegory of residential schools, rape, human experimentation, post-apocalyptic setting related to climate change, torture.