I'm disappointed with this book. I love all the elements that made up this book - Anne of Green Gables, post-apocalyptic fiction, and middle grade reads - so I had such high hopes for it. But, on the whole, it was not great. The setting was 'too' idyllic for a post-apocalyptic world, even when characters leave their safe haven, you don't get much of a sense of danger, and even when danger arrives, the 'enemy' tends to become friends. The pacing is also off. In general, the pacing is slow, which is fine, but, in the case of significant events, they happened too quickly, without enough detail, and are resolved poorly. The Anne-ish elements of the story was a nice idea, but it detracted more than enhanced the story. It was too gimmickish and made the 'Anne' character seem detached from the rest and almost unreal. The relationship focus, which was too much in the foreground, also detracted from the story and seemed more like it existed simply to help fuse it with the Anne story. Although I understand the inclusion, I also found the 'they/them' pronoun usage caused confusion. I found myself having to reread those passages - and there were many - to gain clarity. Overall, the writing was good, but the story itself needed work.
(For those wanting to know if the book included LGBTQ+ characters, aside from the character who prefers 'they/them' pronouns, there's also a lesbian relationship/wedding.)