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Wilders

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

Coryn Williams has grown up in the megacity of Seacouver, where her every need is provided for—except satisfaction with her life. After her parents' suicides, her sister Lou fled the city to work on a rewilding crew, restoring lands once driven to the brink of ecological disaster by humans to a more natural state. Finally of age, Coryn leaves the city with her companion robot to look for her sister. But the outside world is not what she expects—it is rougher and more dangerous, and while some people help her, some resent the city and some covet her most precious resource: her companion robot. As Coryn struggles toward her sister, she uncovers a group of people with a sinister agenda that may endanger Seacouver. When Coryn does find her sister, Lou has secrets she won't share. Can Coryn and Lou learn to trust each other in order to discover the truth hidden behind the surface and to save both Seacouver and the rewilded lands?

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 17, 2017
      Cooper’s plodding coming-of-age novel posits a near future in which humankind has nearly destroyed Earth’s natural resources. Those in domed city-states such as Seacover (formerly Seattle and Vancouver) live in blissful ignorance of life Outside. After Coryn and Lou Williams’s parents killed themselves, the girls were resettled in an orphanage. At age 18, Lou became a rewilder, helping reclaim the land and save threatened species. When Coryn turns 18 a few years later, she takes off with her robot, Paula, in search of Lou. The Outside harbors dangers she never imagined, and by the time the sisters reconnect, neither trusts the other. The science fiction elements—including ecobots, domed cities, and artificial reality glasses—are believable and intriguing, and readers will be drawn into the dystopian depiction of the Outside and the various factions double-crossing each other for money and power. But Lou’s wariness about Coryn means she reveals the truth about her activities too slowly, putting significant drag on the plot and increasing the reader’s frustration instead of amping up dramatic tension. Agent: Eleanor Wood, Spectrum Literary Agency.

    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2017
      The first of a near-future series about an uneasy balance between city and country.Sisters Lou and Coryn Williams live in Seacouver, a vast megacity that incorporates Seattle, Vancouver, and the small cities in between. Desperately unhappy with city life for some ill-defined reason, their parents kill themselves in a mutual suicide pact, landing the teenagers in an orphanage (although the megacity is technologically advanced, their social services seem primitive). Lou is overjoyed when she scores a plum opportunity as a rewilder, a rehabilitator of environmental damage outside the city, but Coryn is devastated to lose her only family. For two years, Lou sends infrequent, blandly cheerful emails to Coryn. Determined to find both her sister and the truth, Coryn departs Seacouver as soon as she comes of age, accompanied by her personal robot Paula and a dangerous level of naivete about the world Outside. On her journey, she encounters dangerous weather, some new friends, opportunists who want to kill her and steal her valuable robot, and zealots of various stripes and unclear motivations who pose a danger both to the city and the barely rewilded landscape. Cooper (Spear of Light, 2016, etc.) is an unfortunate devotee of the tell-not-show school. Key scenes happen offstage. The supposedly smart and seasoned Lou never realizes that her bosses are manipulating her into rash action. Everyone says how stifling it is to live in the city, how flawed it is, how hard it is to fit in, and how great the divide is between rich and poor, but the reader doesn't spend enough substantive time in the city to see much evidence for these. Various factions jockey for power, but their motivations seem both too simple and too opaque. Perhaps more answers and complexity await in future volumes, but it doesn't seem promising. The potential for some interesting ideas languishes in a half-built world populated with barely sketched characters.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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