This is of course not the case - and I’m glad that Kim Purcell’s This is Not a Love Letter exists for teenagers who have to look after their parents, navigate hostile social environments, and cope with trauma. The premise of these essays is usually that teenagers exist in some pristine unspoiled state until they pick up a book about drug use or self-harm that makes them unhappy. But Binti’s story is nothing quite so straightforward.Įvery now and then I read an article or essay musing about whether or not young adult literature is “too dark” - whether there’s too much sex, too much violence, too much sadness. With the help of her new friend Mwinyi - a member of her father’s people, the Enyi Zinariya - she navigates the desert while plagued with nightmares of violence, knowing she must find a way to broker a peace once and for all. The Night Masquerade picks up where Home left off, with Binti learning, through her newly enhanced senses, that her home - and her dear friend Okwu, a jellyfish-like alien from a race called the Meduse - is under attack from the Khoush, Earth’s dominant ethnicity and the Meduse’s ancestral enemies. A couple of reviews I wrote went up on NPR these last couple of weeks! Here are samplings of them:īinti: The Night Masquerade by Nnedi Okorafor
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