kiracanread
Written on May 24, 2020
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“Fresh, compelling—and timely.” —Veronica Roth, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Carve the Mark and the Divergent series
“Vividly conjured…positively chilling.” —The New York Times
“Spectacular.” —Buzzfeed
Set in a near-future Taipei plagued by pollution, a group of teens risk everything to save their city in this thrilling novel from critically acclaimed author Cindy Pon.
Jason Zhou survives in a divided society where the elite use their wealth to buy longer lives. The rich wear special suits, protecting them from the pollution and viruses that plague the city, while those without suffer illness and early deaths. Frustrated by his city’s corruption and still grieving the loss of his mother who died as a result of it, Zhou is determined to change things, no matter the cost.
With the help of his friends, Zhou infiltrates the lives of the wealthy in hopes of destroying the international Jin Corporation from within. Jin Corp not only manufactures the special suits the rich rely on, but they may also be manufacturing the pollution that makes them necessary.
Yet the deeper Zhou delves into this new world of excess and wealth, the more muddled his plans become. And against his better judgment, Zhou finds himself falling for Daiyu, the daughter of Jin Corp’s CEO. Can Zhou save his city without compromising who he is, or destroying his own heart?
✨ You can read this book for free on RivetedLit this month (May 2020)!This is a critically important addition to YA and speculative fiction, and more people should be talking about this book! Want tackles social and political issues: wealth disparity, access to healthcare, climate change and environmental issues, all with a found family of misfits set on changing the world for the better.
"Without. We want and are left wanting."Thanks to lax environmental regulations and climate change, Taipei is heavily polluted by a toxic smog and viruses run rampant. Jin Corp has developed a way to survive in this new normal: special suits and regulated air spaces for those who can afford it. For everyone else? Their lives are brutal and not expected to go beyond 40.
"Books were my escapism, my retreat. They were how I related to this senseless world we lived in."Want is told in the first-person perspective of Zhou, who lost his mother to pneumonia because they couldn't afford to treat it. He and his friends are tired of the status quo developed over the past two generations; the quiet acceptance and adaptation to a polluted world. And they're determined to do something about it. (It's in the synopsis, so I won't rehash it.)
"Taipei's youth had become chameleons. If we couldn't change the dirty smog that smothered our city, we could at least control how we appeared."Privilege is at the fore of this story, and our main character Zhou is left navigating the you world he despises. One of my favorite tropes is when a character learns their worldview is limited, and in Want it is two-fold. I appreciate how he brings up that throwing money at a symptom doesn't fix the issues in society, and that at least one of the yous at the party agrees with him, prompting an actual discussion. "Reality always crushes your ideals", but I like how the characters in the book refuse to sit idly and wait for death.
"The rich wear special suits that protect them from the pollution and viruses that plague the city."Overall, I enjoyed Want and am excited to dive straight into Ruse! I'll admit that reading this book during a pandemic is a little on-the-nose frightening, so be sure you're in the right headspace to pick this one up. It's an important discussion of society and privilege, and is even more relevant now.
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