I'll start this review saying I normally read high fantasy and not fiction, so I did find it somewhat not that entretaining. Why am I not lowering the score? Because the message in this book and the story told deserve 5 stars.
"Or maybe I admired her simply because she had no markings, no future, no dark realities awaiting her. Because she was free. Because her body was her own." (pg, 59)
Body of Stars is a dystopian novel written by Laura Maylene Walter, published on March 18th, 2021. The story is set in the future, where girls are born with the future etched into their skin, in the shape of moles and freckles. Their predictions change once they hit puberty, turning into their “adult markings” and solidifying their future. When a girl transcends from her childhood markings into her adult markings, she enters her changeling period, where, for a few weeks, she's irresistible to men. Changelings often go missing and return weeks later with bruises in their bodies and their marks copied and shared, printed into posters, comics or tarot cards.
Society treats the freckles on girls' skin as a gift. While women have the future in their skin, it's not just theirs. The government carries out regular inspections of their marks until the girl becomes an adult, the father and mother have a traditional need to see their whole body to learn about their own future. They are seen as powerful and almost divine, but find themselves limited and objectified. The government sees this as a privilege, when for most girls it is a burden.
“Above all, we implore changelings to recognize that the burden of maintaining purity rests on their own shoulders- it is the first grave responsibility they must face in their adult lives, and a modest price indeed for the privilege of holding the future in their skin.”(pg, 139)
When abducted girls are returned to their normal lives once their changeling period is over, they find that there’s little they can actually return to. Abducted girls are blamed for what has happened to them. The crimes men commit against them are brushed off as unfortunate events, leaving the perpetrators free and the victims with the blame. These girls find that their life has been flipped upside down: they have to undergo a mandatory humiliating recovery process that treats them as fragile and broken. Their captors are able to copy their marks and similars onto elaborate posters and tarot cards for distribution without their consent. Colleges do not accept them, trying to keep their reputation intact.
“‘I want to go to university,’ Glory said, without hesitation.
‘Oh, darling.’ The nurse sat back in her chair. ‘You know that’s impossible.’” (pg, 193)
This book reflects our society in many ways, as men get away with much more and generally have more freedoms than the average woman. Women these days can feel like they have a lot of freedom, but when it comes down to it, it looks like men always win. In the book, women are accused of "allowing" the kidnappings, while women in today's society still say that it is "their fault" that they allowed what happened to them. In the book, in some countries, girls with marks of becoming housewives are denied access to education, a clever critique of the way women's choices are limited by factors they cannot control.
The book also shines a light on how women support each other and how they’ve started to make changes to their own society to make it better. An example would be The Mountain School, a school that opens its doors to abducted girls and helps them through the recovery process, helping them finish their education and accompanying them when their markings are replicated on works of public display.
There’s an ongoing theme of women without markings, fictional beings who are not tied to a destiny in their skin and who have control over their life and themselves. Women who were depicted in banners, and who made entire towns erupt over them and have them removed in a couple days. Something so strange, compared to the painting in museums that had markings, or the statues that have them chiseled into the marble. A statement.
"A woman unmarked, a woman not restricted by either her own future or that of others. No one knew what to make of that." (pg, 343)
This book will not be the one for everyone, it deals with topics that not all of us are ready to talk about. It is written to bring attention to a matter in a more accessible and entertaining way. It is a thought-provoking metaphor for the problems in our world and an idea for a change.
“You are free. You are wild. You are, now and in the future, entirely your own.” (pg, 352)