Dustborn by Erin Bowman is an easy YA read set in a place
that is only slightly less doomed than N K Jemisin’s geomancer trilogy. That
the map at the front is critical to the plot was refreshing. The contingencies
of modern book format out of universe and the awkward yet necessary placement
of the map in-universe allows forgiveness for a lack of consistent absolute
scale. The characters are appropriately ignorant or startled by Old World technology,
as they call it. The setting appears post-apocalyptic (which is technically
correct), and the astronomy is wonky, but the sheer ignorance of the locals
about anything outside of survival, and sometimes even then, is an effective
screen for the actual truth. When the truth is revealed, the rather shallow
world building makes sense. Sometimes with YA books it is hard to tell whether a
book is the first of a trilogy.
The names of the characters are a bit on the nose. The protagonist,
Delta of Dead River, is the predictable adolescent girl point-of-view, while
Asher of Alkali Lake is the mandatory love interest/antagonist. The baby doesn’t
get a name until later, and Delta’s creativity does not extend to names. Nobody
is particularly likeable in the harsh environment, but some people are more
awful than others. The distribution of skills and knowledge makes The
Masterpiece Society’s utopia look well-planned. The plot is stolen, but no more so than many science
fiction juveniles. The linguistics is shoddy, as it nearly always is, but
serviceable. The thematic swearing is mildly irritating because the thematic
appropriateness is not enough to distract from the awkward prosody reminiscent
of “translationese.”
There is nothing revolutionary about the setting, plot, or
characterization in Dustborn; it is, nonetheless, a pleasant diversion, and
a wholly acceptable juvenile for those parents who find the classics a bit too
patriarchal – or do not want their kids watching the Mad Max franchise. If
Bowman set another story in the future (or past) of this setting, it would be
welcome.
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