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Weeks away from her eighteenth birthday, Lake's world is shattered: she, her boyfriend, Will, and her best friend, Penny, are in a car accident, and Lake is the only survivor. Resurrection technology exists, but there's a catch eryone gets only one resurrection choice, to be used when they turn 18 or forfeited. Lake is running out of time, and her choice is made more difficult by a promise she made years earlier. Her brother, Matt, a quadriplegic after a childhood accident, has been waiting for Lake to turn 18 so he can legally ll himself and be resurrected in a working body. But Lake's family fell apart after Matt's accident, and Will and Penny are everything to her. When Lake meets a boy who fundamentally believes that resurrections are wrong, she faces another crossroads. The world building isn't entirely effective e consequences of resurrection technology are explored more thoroughly in Neal Shusterman's Scythe (2016) d a late-breaking twist is more confusing than compelling. Still, the concept is fascinating, and readers will eagerly await Lake's decision.
Kirkus ReviewsLake Devereaux, 17, lost two beloved friends in a horrific accident, but she's permitted to resurrect just one person, an agonizing choice complicated by a promise made years earlier. Medical breakthroughs have made human resurrection possible. Regulations for population control provide that on their 18th birthday, each teen may elect to resurrect one dead person, at that time only. Resurrection is possible years after death, the resurrected person resuming life, free of flaws or disease, at the age they were when they died. Lake's older brother, Matt, was paralyzed from the neck down in an accident four years ago. Embittered, he stopped trying to kill himself only when their parents secured Lake's promise to resurrect him after a planned suicide. While her dead friends' parents beg Lake to resurrect one of their children, Matt and her parents remind her she's already committed. Then, with a boy she meets in a therapist's waiting room, she uncovers secrets prompting hard questions about her friends, family, and herself (all evidently white). The novel's best when exploring how resurrecting a loved one transforms individuals, families, and friends. The effect on the larger world remains unexplored. Odd, contradictory resurrection rules go unexplained. Could a resurrected person resurrect another person? Resurrection's existed for decades yet seems to have effected only minor, local changes. These worldbuilding defects impede what should be provocative explorations of disability and medical ethics. Shallow execution mars an intriguing premise. (Science fiction. 14-18)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Three weeks before Lake Devereaux-s 18th birthday, her best friend, Penny, and boyfriend, Will, are killed in a car accident. Baker (
Gr 9 Up-ife changes in an instant for Lake Devereaux when she survives a tragic car accident that kills her boyfriend and her best friend. In this near-future contemporary novel, teens have the choice to resurrect a loved one when they turn 18. Technology brings people back from the dead and returns them to full health. But Lake's resurrection choice has never been her own. An unspoken family pact has promised Lake's resurrection to her older brother Matt, who is living with quadriplegia as a result of an accident five years earlier. In order to regain the use of his arms and legs, Matt wants to die and be resurrected. But Lark wants no part in Matt's death. The narrative jumps between the past and the present, allowing Lake and readers to piece together the full picture of what happened with Matt's accident as Lake comes closer to her final decision. Baker adeptly slips in clues that develop a complex picture of who Lake is. Unfortunately, the story's intriguing premise is marred by its logic that a person with disabilities is better off as "normal." Matt's anger may be justified, but the assumption that he can lead a full life only if he is no longer quadriplegic is problematic. VERDICT With its references to teen death and possible suicide, this is a possible read-alike for teens fascinated by Jay Asher's 13 Reasons Why. Ultimately, this book's depiction of disability is too flawed to recommend it.Sarah Wethern, Douglas County Library, Alexandria, MN
Voice of Youth AdvocatesLake, her boyfriend Will, and their friend Penny are enjoying the summer as they each near their eighteenth birthday. A car accident takes Wills and Pennys lives, leaving a devastated Lake to make an impossible choice. The law states that when you turn eighteen you may choose to resurrect one deceased person or forfeit that right. The families of both Will and Penny pressure Lake to choose their loved one. Lake, however, has already promised her resurrection to someone who is still alive. She finds a sounding board in new friend, Ringo, who helps Lake make some discoveries that will influence how she thinks about people in her life. Lake and her estranged brother, Matt, the person she has pledged to resurrect, solve a scavenger hunt together. Deciphering the clues, which were left by Will, brings the siblings closer and provides some answers for both. The book smartly deals with grief on many levels and among all the characters. Losing two friends at and being close to the families of the deceased compounds the overwhelming sadness, grief, and guilt that Lake feels. While the author makes sure the reader does not drown in such weighty issues, Baker also does not use the resurrection technology as an easy fix concerning Lakes choice. The technology actually intensifies the questions and issues Lake must confront. While there are issues with some of the resurrection details, this is a provocative, twisty story with appeal across genders and genres.Tom Malinowski.
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Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal
Voice of Youth Advocates
** An emotional page-turner from the New York Times-bestselling author of The Whisper Network **
If you could choose one person to bring back to life, who would it be?
Seventeen-year-old Lake Deveraux is the survivor of a car crash that killed her best friend and boyfriend. Now she faces an impossible choice. Resurrection technology changed the world, but strict laws allow just one resurrection per citizen, to be used on your eighteenth birthday or lost forever.
You only have days to decide.
For each grieving family, Lake is the best chance to bring back their child.
For Lake, it's the only way to reclaim a piece of happiness after her own family fell apart.
And Lake must also grapple with a secret--and illegal--vow she made years ago to resurrect someone else. Someone who's not even dead yet.
Who do you need most?
As Lake's eighteenth birthday nears, secrets and betrayals new and old threaten to eclipse her cherished memories. Lake has one chance to save a life . . . but can she live with her choice?