ALA Booklist
(Tue May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2018)
In her debut, McNamara juggles varied plotlines with the control of a master sailor. The story starts in 1719, when in a boat under siege, Mary, disguised as Mark, spies something she's never conceived of before: a pirate girl. Anne is the pirate captain, Calico Jack Rackham's mistress, and a swashbuckling force in her own right. Mary, who's been playing at being a boy almost her whole life, is soon a member of the pirate band, and confused by her attraction to Anne. Tropical islands, the lure of loot, the threat of being hung for pirating or being "unnatural," and the hard life conventional women must live all conspire to throw roadblocks in the way of Anne and Mary's romance. As Mark, Mary is used to binding her breasts so she looks like a boy, but there's a lot more she needs to unbind to live a full life. The connections to issues today will inspire readers to think beyond the adventure and root for a happy ending. An auspicious first novel.
School Library Journal
(Tue May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2018)
Gr 8 Up-In her debut novel, McNamara creates a compelling backstory for legendary female pirate Anne Bonney, as well as folding accurate historical details into a plot about how and why youth took to sea in 18th-century England, the physical and social hazards of social class clashes on land and at sea, and the gender politics that, then too, made the simple fact of being female constantly dangerous. The fictional Mary Reade, raised from early childhood as a boy, leaves her poverty-stricken home in Wapping, London, with her best (and uninformed) friend, a boy who later becomes a love interest and a danger in her life when they meet again in the Caribbean. In the meantime, Mary has shot an evil sea captain, joined a pirate gang that includes Anne and her lover, Calico Jack, and has finally been revealed as a young woman rather than a young man. Anne and Mary fall in love across months and chapters that present only a slightly anachronistic view of their awareness and willingness to follow their hearts. All of this makes for delightful reading for anyone who enjoys pirate stories or is seeking LGBTQ+ fiction that is positive as well as fairly realistic. VERDICT A great choice for historical fiction collections.Francisca Goldsmith, Library Ronin, Worcester, MA