FICTION

For Darkness Shows the Stars

398p. HarperCollins/Balzer & Bray. June 2012. Tr $17.99. ISBN 978-0-06-200614-1; ebook $9.99. ISBN 978-0-06-211437-2.
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RedReviewStarGr 7 Up—Told partially through secret letters between forbidden childhood friends, this novel is a postapocalyptic retelling of Jane Austen's Persuasion that will be a hit with fans of sci-fi romances such as Nancy Farmer's The House of the Scorpion (S & S, 2002) and Catherine Fisher's Incarceron (Dial, 2010). Four years earlier, 18-year-old Elliot North, a member of the Luddite ruling class, refused to run away with Kai, one of her family's servants and her first love. In the years since his departure, Elliot has become responsible for her family's struggling estate and taking care of the Reduced, laborers who are treated as underclass servants. Technology has been forbidden since the Wars of the Lost, a fight Luddites think was the result of humans trying to improve on nature, and Elliot's options for advancing the estate are limited. When a fleet of former servants offers to rent the family's shipyards, Elliot knows that she cannot afford to refuse their money. She's excited to discover that Kai is one of the captains, but soon learns that he is not the boy she remembers, and, like Elliot, he has plenty of secrets. Epistolary sections help readers connect with Kai and Elliot and bridge the gap between the past and present. Peterfreund takes her time developing characters and the political and social realities of a stratified society. The plot, nonetheless, moves along at a steady clip. Readers will keep turning the pages right up to the end.—Leigh Collazo, Ed Willkie Middle School, Fort Worth, TX
Drawing heavily from Jane Austen's Persuasion, this story features a post-apocalyptic society consisting of the Reduced; their children, the Posts, who do not share their genetic limitations; and Luddite leaders. Luddite Elliot realizes she is still deeply in love with Kai, her childhood sweetheart, and must resist her entire upbringing to truly begin to see how she can change the world.
Drawing heavily from Jane Austen’s Persuasion, this

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