In the aftermath of the vicious genetic war that devastated their home City, Kat and Tanka J are ready for a new start. With their Uncle Prester and Aunt Millijue, who has been headhunted into a prominent new position, they move away from the war-torn Cities and into the New Frontier. In the New Frontier, they can forget about the destruction, and the terror, and the deaths of their parents. In the New Frontier, in the beautiful Cherry Heaven estate, they can start over.
But someone else is starting over, too. Someone who has been through unspeakable horrors—horrors that were not supposed to exist in the New Frontier, horrors that everyone still believe don’t exist. Someone who wants to show the world the truth about the corruption existing on the highest levels of their new, perfect utopian society…no matter what the cost.
For the most part, this is a good novel. The characters of Kat and Tanka and Luka are all lovingly drawn, and by the time you turn the last page, they are people you care about and want to stay with.
I do have a few points that trouble me about the book. First, how could Kat and Tanka be Atsumisi when their parents were both Galrezi? Maybe I’m wrong, but it seems to me that genes are genes—you get your genes from your parents. For the girls to be Atsumisi, one of their parents should have been as well—unless Prester and Millijue faked their IDs? Is that even possible?
The other issue I have is with why Q Essnid would have needed to kill the Papillon family in the first place. It’s just not clear. Obviously, he is not the saint he makes himself out to be—otherwise he would not be involved with Linveki’s factory, but I just don’t understand why he needed the Papillons dead. There’s a throwaway line suggesting he wanted their house, but he never moves in, and his own house is far fancier. So what is the motivation? Was Celia Papillon poised to reveal the truth about the Factory? What danger did the girls pose?
I was expected to see some sort of sinister underbelly to the entire O-HA organization, but aside from Q Essnid’s shady past, that never really surfaced.
Have any of you people read it? Do you have any insight into these things? Please share, if you have.
Aside from those two major sticking points, I really enjoyed this novel. I think it does a fascinating job of exploring the dystopia beneath the surface of the utopia, and the dystopian society trying to rebuild itself in general.
The references to The Diary of Pelly D, the previous book, were nice touches, but as I read Pelly D over a year ago, it took me a little too long to strain my memory to remember why we cared about these people.
The Holocaust-esque overtones were (as in Pelly D) very heavy-handed.
I did enjoy reading it, don't get me wrong, but it loses points for those two points that don't really make sense to me. Overall, good solid read and interesting addition to the post-apocalyptic dystopian genre.