Title: Dust
Author: Alison Stine
Genre: realistic fiction
Similar books: The Truth About Everything by Bridget Farr
Klickitat by Peter Rock
Rating:
Summary (provided by publisher): After her father has a premonition, Thea and her family move to the Bloodless Valley of southern Colorado, hoping to make a fresh start. But the rivers are dry, the crops are dying, and the black blizzards of Colorado have returned. Much like the barren land, Thea feels her life has stopped growing. She is barely homeschooled, forbidden from going to the library, and has no way to contact her old friends—all due to her parents’ fear of the outside world’s dangerous influence.
But to make ends meet, Thea is allowed to work at the cafĂ© in town. There, she meets Ray, who is deaf. Thea, who was born hard of hearing, has always been pushed by her parents to pass as someone who can hear. Now, with Ray secretly teaching Thea how to sign, she begins to learn what she’s been missing—not just a new language but a whole community and maybe even a chance at love.
My opinion: Oftentimes, books featuring prepper families make the family head appear delusional, prepping for a disaster that is never going to happen. Stine takes a different approach. Thea's family are certainly preppers. They're living a "simpler" life. The problem becomes that they are prepping for the wrong emergency. It becomes apparent that there is a disaster on the way that they don't have the skills to handle. The result is a book that explores family, community, secrets, and ecology. While it takes a lot of expected directions, the journey is interesting enough to be worth a read especially as the description is visceral.
Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley
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