Paperback ©2017 | -- |
The monster quake known as the Big One hits Portland on March 9, 2058, shattering Meryem's world in this postapocalyptic story. Not giving up hope that her mother, Jessa, is still alive, Meryem faithfully tries to contact her through her PerSafe code. Other folks come to live in her house as part of disaster relief planning, including a grandmother and a great-aunt whose housing has been damaged. Feldman has penned an intricate tale about a family and community coping after catastrophe and the myriad survival issues involved on the path forward. As in Feldman's previous novels, a time-travel element sends Meryem deep into the past to act upon a social-justice issue; this time, she helps a young slave girl in sixteenth-century Istanbul reach safety. It's a crowded novel for sure, and the twenty-first-century narrative is the stronger parallel story. The futuristic details of the 2050s will engage readers, and the beautifully rendered Meryem, as she comes to terms with devastation and grief, will win hearts.
School Library Journal (Wed Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2017)Gr 7 Up-eryem Zarfati, 16, is the granddaughter of a Turkish American Jew living in Portland, Oregon, in the 2050s. Struggling with her mother's disappearance after The Big Onean 8.9 magnitude earthquakeshe continues to search for her and refuses to give up hope. The biracial teen meets the mysterious time-traveling Serakh. In the midst of frustration and uncertainty, and with Serakh's help, Meryem is able to save Izabel, a girl living in captivity in 16th-century Istanbul. She also discovers the truth about her lost mother. The 2050s setting is entertaining and insightful. Social media is outdated; due to global warming, February has become the new March; in the restaurants and cafes, the MyMenu tablet features "pixel-perfect images of butterscotch custard, cinnamon rolls, and apple pie;" and there's finally peace in the Middle East. This elegantly written narrative will capture and delight readers. However, in the interest of historical accuracy, the exact era in which the novel is set and the specific details of that historical period needs more documentation in the author's note. Also, Meryem's character development as a young woman with a strong desire to push the limits for other young women in ancient history is admirable. However, Izabel, a Turkish character, is represented as incapable of saving herself without the magical help of others, even though she's initially described as competent. VERDICT A strong addition to diverse speculative fiction.—Taraneh Matloob Haghanikar, University of Northern Iowa
ALA Booklist (Thu May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2008)
School Library Journal (Wed Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2017)
CHAPTER THREEEleven Months LaterFriday, February 14, 2059
I thanked Mr. Nabli for the Turkish delight because Jessa insists on showing appreciation for gifts. I would have preferred radish seeds. You can't plant candy.
"My pleasure, Meryem," he said. We seated ourselves on opposite sides of the dining room table, next to our weekly tray of tea and zucchini bread.
"None for me this time," he said. "It's the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. I fast from sunrise to sunset."
"Sorry," I said. I slid the tray to the end of the table and wondered for the sextillionth time why Jessa had told Rose to contact this man if anything happened. Two weeks after The Big One, she did.
Grandma was annoyed with Rose, as usual, but Grandma's lawyer assured us that Adnan Nabli came from a respectable law firm with offices in New York, Portland, and Istanbul. She was furious when she found out that Mr. Nabli was to be my temporary guardian, but the lawyers said all the papers were in order. Even in her absence, Jessa got her way.Mr. Nabli extracted a vintage fountain pen and stack of papers from a courier bag made from upcycled Mylar survival blankets. "How are things?"
"Fine," I said, spouting the same answer to the same question I'd heard for months so we could get the damn paperwork over with. Fine--the other all-purpose four-letter F-word, suitable for all, especially useful in self-defense.
Mr. Nabli produced the usual sheaf of official-looking documents duly stamped and decorated with:
PORTLAND METROPOLITAN AREA RESILIENCE COUNCILAuthorized by National Disaster Recovery Plan 2058-16aSTATE DISASTER RECOVERY COORDINATION OFFICEFEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY, REGION X
"Fine as in genuinely better than last week, Meryem? Or fine as in shut up and let's get down to business?"
A laugh bubbled up inside and suffocated in my mouth.
Mr. Nabli handed me his pen. "I speak English as well as legalese. Do I detect a smile this week?"
"Fine as in the second sense," I admitted. Maybe he was being particularly friendly because this was the first time Rose wasn't meeting with us, and he wanted to put me at ease.
"Fair enough," he said. We got down to business. The first list claimed to contain all of the current non-credit occupants of 732-NW19-97209, meaning my house on Northwest 19th and Johnson. According to the Council, the non-credit occupants were me and Rose plus now The Ladies--Auntie An and my grandmother--who'd been with us since right after The Big One. Or, in legalese:
ZARFATI, MERYEM EINHORN, 15, RESIDENT MINOR, TEMPORARY WARD OF ADNAN NABLI, ATTORNEY KROPOTKIN, HROUZA, 41, RESIDENT HOUSEKEEPEREINHORN, AN CHAU CLEMENT, 88, GREAT-AUNT OF RESIDENT MINORZARFATI, LY TIEN EINHORN, 85, GRANDMOTHER OF RESIDENT MINOR
The only other document where I'd seen Rose's Russian name was her American passport. Calling Rose a resident housekeeper was like calling your right lung a resident organ. I couldn't imagine life without Rose. I could, however, imagine The Ladies returning to their condo as soon as it was rehabbed.
"Jessa should be on this list," I said. "She lives here."
Mr. Nabli got that sympathetic look. "I know. We've gone through this before. However, it is my responsibility to consider potential inheritance and insurance factors."
Blah, blah, blah. I added my mother's name as usual, and her current age.
Zarfati, Jessa Einhorn, 51, resident owner, employed--PaleoGenetics, LLC.
Mr. Nabli smoothed his hair, which fell to his shoulders in a thick black mane and smelled of coconuts. "I'm still trying to get credit-tenant funds for your grandmother and great-aunt, since they lodged here temporarily after earthquake-related displacement and in lieu of seeking Council-supervised shelter elsewhere. But the Council insists that family is family, and they don't qualify as credit tenants."
The Council. I was sick to death of the Council. They and FEMA still governed so much of our lives--where we could travel, what was available to eat, and who could shelter where. They tightened the water restrictions we'd had before The Big One and made it a crime to be out after midnight.
Mr. Nabli must have read my face. "Portland is still under a state of emergency, Meryem. We all have to do our part."
...
"I see you'll turn sixteen next week," he said. "February 18. Your date of birth is on all my documents. Any celebration plans?"
He read my look again. "Right. Not this year." Mr. Nabli cleared his throat. "One more item."
I knew what was coming. My mouth turned sour. I stood up and pushed my chair against the table. Meeting over.
"I'm drafting the missing persons documentation," he persisted. "On March 9, it will be one year since The Big One, and under the law ..."
"Mr. Nabli," I said, trying to keep my voice strong and steady. "I spent all morning at RescueCommons examining scans of the tsunami's coastal inundation zone. I found dental braces with three teeth attached. I've had enough of missing persons for one day."
His voice softened. "I know this is hard, Meryem. Believe me, I'm on your side. Let's wait to discuss this until after your birthday."
"Fine."
Mr. Nabli capped his precious pen and reached for his courier bag. "I can still arrange for someone to guard the house so you can attend the bicentennial events today. Leave it to Oregon to become a state on Valentine's Day."
I picked up his bike helmet. "Too much work."
He didn't argue. "Don't forget to set your Sentry Mat sensors after I leave. Safety is paramount, you know."
Paramount. I remembered Jessa pronouncing and defining the word in her homeschooling mode. Pa-ra-mount. Of chief concern. We were sitting cross-legged on the floor. I was fan-folding a page from one of Grandma's vintage word-a-day calendars. "Let's see, lovey," she said. "When you grow up and become a sky diver, the state of your parachute will be paramount."
"Meryem? My bike helmet?"
"Sorry. I was someplace else." I handed Mr. Nabli his helmet and waved him on his way. Then I sat on the hallway stairs and leaned against the prayer rug that had hung on the wall there since Jessa brought it back from Istanbul when I was a baby. I slid a finger across my left forearm where my PerSafe chip nested between flexor and extensor muscles. Jessa's chip was just like mine, our private link that had been silent for so long.
Now that Mr. Nabli was gone, I'd type in her code and wait. So what if I was the only one left who still believed Jessa was out there somewhere. It wouldn't hurt to keeping trying.
Which was so not true. I shuddered. Waiting and trying and nothing-nothing-nothing over and over hurt like hell, but I'd keep doing it anyway. If I stopped, she'd never come back.
Excerpted from Seven Stitches by Ruth Tenzer Feldman
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
It's been a year since the Big One--the Cascadia subduction zone earthquake--devastated Portland, and while Meryem Zarfati's injuries have healed and her neighborhood is rebuilding, her mother is still missing. Refusing to give up hope, Meryem continues to search for her mother even as she learns to live without her in a changed Portland. After she receives a magical prayer shawl handed down from her maternal grandmother, a mysterious stranger appears, and Meryem is called to save a young girl living in slavery--in sixteenth-century Istanbul. The third companion in the Oregon Book Award-winning Blue Thread series explores how we recover--and rebuild--after the worst has happened.