The survivors of a terrible war huddle in a POW camp located in New York's Central Park every winter, controlled by wardens put in place by the victorious Red Allies. Teens Phee and Sky, along with their mother, Sarah, spend summers on their own in lower Manhattan, yet like all other New Yorkers they must show up in the park every winter. Mischance puts them at odds with warden Rolladin and they run from the park, only to fall into an even more dangerous situation where everything they thought they knew about their family and the wider world is wrong.
VERDICT This dystopian debut is more likely to appeal to teens than adults, with chapters alternating between bookish Sky and her fiercer sister Phee and tending toward melodrama when they both fall for the same refugee boy who arrives with a group from England.
Post-apocalyptic fiction fans will appreciate this distinct addition to the genre, a plausible imagining of life in New York City that has regressed to stark survival. Sisters Phee and Sky, alternating narrators with often opposing personalities, provide two sides to every situation. For instance, while Phee is thrilled by her birthday gift from their mother-a gun to use for protection-Sky views it as "totally inappropriate" for her younger, less restrained sibling. Plot twists bring characters into a variety of challenging circumstances. After fleeing the prisoner of war camp, for example, Phee, Sky, and their fellow escapees must abandon the relative safety of the streets for the seldom-used subway tunnels, allegedly inhabited by cannibalistic "tunnel feeders." The memorable setting vividly depicts isolated, war-torn Manhattan, including iconic landmarks such as Central Park and The Standard Hotel on the High Line repurposed by the island's remaining inhabitants.
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