Reviews for Pacifica

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

In the year 2193, or 81 Post Melt, a president's son and a pirate's daughter reluctantly sail the treacherous seas to rescue a friend. The future is grim: Natural catastrophes have resculpted the continents, and epidemics have wiped out half of humanity. What used to be inland Sacramento is now the coastal Noram City, the Alliance's capital, where the wealthy "kanshu" live at a safe elevation and the struggling Shorelings below. To address resource shortages, the president has announced a Relocation Act, ordering 500 people (nearly all Shorelings) to a man-made island, Pacifica. The resulting riots bring together pirate-turned-smuggler Marin with president's son Ross Torres, both 17, and his friend Adam Baker, son of the vice president. After Adam is abducted, Marin offers Ross her helpfor a price. Although it suffers from uneven pacing, the twist-filled story does pick up, exploring a host of political, social, and environmental themes. The cast is ethnically diverse, and the characters' English is peppered with Spanish, French, and Japanese. A thoughtful author's note reveals that the story was inspired by her Japanese-American family's internment during World War II and offers poignant historical context for readers who do not make this connection on their own.Simmons' slow-building post-apocalyptic adventure and opposites-attract love story should satisfy readers who miss dystopian romances. (author's note, suggested reading) (Fiction.12-17) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Horn Book
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

In a polluted, dystopic future America, smuggler Marin comes from a line of corsarios (pirates). Riots over the Relocation Act--moving impoverished "Shorelings" to the man-made island Pacifica--connect Marin with the president's son Ross, who ultimately needs Marin's help on a desperate sea-faring quest. The dark, atmospheric story's theme of internment (expanded on in the author's note) echoes history, while the climate changeravaged dystopia rings unsettlingly possible. (c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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