oyceter: Stack of books with text "mmm... books!" (mmm books)
[personal profile] oyceter
After a nuclear apocalypse and subsequent global cooling, the enclosed glass pyramid that is the city of Palmares Tres rises in what used to be Brazil. Palmares Tres is ruled by a queen and Aunties, but every five years, the city elects a Summer King. And at the end of the year, the Summer King is sacrificed as he selects the next queen.

June Costa and her friend Gil are very caught up in the current Summer King elections, and when their favorite candidate Enki wins, Gil and Enki quickly fall in love as June plots with Enki to create politically risky art installations. This sounds like it should be your standard post-apocalyptic YA romance triangle, and it really isn't. Gil and Enki's romance mainly acts as a backdrop to June constantly having to balance social approval against radical art.

I am having a terrible time writing a summary of this. There's June's battle with her desire to win the prestigious Queen's Award while knowing that anything too daring will disqualify her. There's Enki pushing her more and more toward radicalism as he uses his Summer King position to make the city focus on its poorest citizens. There's June's terrible relationship with her mother and stepmother, with the death of her father haunting them. There's the city's anti-technology tendencies in a world where many people have abandoned their bodies to become datastreams. There's the conflict between the wakas (the powerless youth of the city) and the grandes (the non-youth) along with the class conflict June has been too privileged to pay attention to before Enki. And all the layers are so easily intertwined with the others: this is a future city that feels incredibly real and complicated.

I've previously liked but not loved Johnson's books—Racing the Dark felt too crowded and lacking in focus while Moonshine had a great world but too much paranormal-romance-genre-flavored romance for me. The Summer Prince manages to juggle a bit of romance with a lot of worldbuilding, along with a great YA coming of age story that is June coming into her political and artistic own, and it really feels like Johnson has come into her own as a novelist as well.

And all this is ignoring the incredibly powerful narrative of a Summer King's year and the ritual the city was founded with, the choice of mortality and sacrifice and how it impacts everyone in the book.

This is a really good book on so many levels. I love Palmares Tres and the little glimpses we get of the world outside, I love having same-sex relationships casually in the background, I love little things like June's relationship with her rival Bebel and how that unwraps, I love the bits and pieces of Brazil and the South American African diaspora, I love the non-dystopian and non-utopian matriarchy, and I really really love how it's about sociopolitical moral dilemmas and art and expression written in a way that is complicated and difficult and very personal.

Anyway, go read!

Links:
- [personal profile] skygiants' review
- [personal profile] starlady's review

(no subject)

Wed, Mar. 13th, 2013 12:38 am (UTC)
musesfool: Eli Bradley, aka Patriot, of the Young Avengers (he does not lose himself)
Posted by [personal profile] musesfool
Gil and Enki

Not knowing anything else about this book (though it sounds good), it's not a reimagining of Gilgamesh? I can't imagine the names are a coincidence...

(no subject)

Wed, Mar. 13th, 2013 01:53 pm (UTC)
havocthecat: a pre-raphaelite is reading (pre-raphaelite reading)
Posted by [personal profile] havocthecat
That is exactly the comment I was going to make. It sounds like there's a seriously expanded role for the priestess of Inanna who 'civilized' Enkidu, even, in the form of June. Which I'm all for!

It really does sound like a fascinating book, regardless of the potential reimagining.

(no subject)

Tue, May. 14th, 2013 04:14 am (UTC)
starlady: Raven on a MacBook (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] starlady
The names are clearly not coincidental, but I think Johnson was playing more on the doomed (romantic) relationship between the two mean than any other part of the narrative.

(no subject)

Wed, May. 15th, 2013 03:03 pm (UTC)
musesfool: Zuko & the dragon (lucky to be born)
Posted by [personal profile] musesfool
Oh, interesting.

(no subject)

Wed, May. 15th, 2013 03:59 pm (UTC)
starlady: Raven on a MacBook (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] starlady

Actually, having finished the book and thought about it since more, I think you're right that it's doing Gilgamesh--but the story is definitely rotated to focus first on June, then on Enki, and least on Gill. It's pretty cool, and definitely not a straight retelling of the original.

(no subject)

Wed, May. 15th, 2013 04:02 pm (UTC)
musesfool: achilles, with text over his cheek saying "godlike achilles" (ever to be the best)
Posted by [personal profile] musesfool
I have it on my kindle to read - it's probably up next after I finish the book I just got from the library - so now I'm even more excited about it.

(no subject)

Wed, May. 15th, 2013 04:04 pm (UTC)
starlady: Raven on a MacBook (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] starlady

I already know it's one of my best books of the year. It's so amazing.

(no subject)

Wed, Mar. 13th, 2013 12:58 am (UTC)
buymeaclue: (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] buymeaclue
Hmm, interesting! My reaction while reading the first few paragraphs was 100%, "Sounds good, but her books always sound good and then I just fail to love them..." And then I hit paragraph four. Maybe I will give this a chance.

(no subject)

Wed, Mar. 13th, 2013 02:04 am (UTC)
yasaman: picture of jasmine flower, with text yasaman (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] yasaman
The Summer King concept is one I've always found fascinating, and this sounds like a really interesting take on it. I was on the fence about picking this up because like you, I kind of bounced off the paranormal romance-ness of Moonshine, but it's definitely moved up a few notches on my to-read list!

(no subject)

Wed, Mar. 13th, 2013 02:37 am (UTC)
skygiants: Wendy from the Middleman making faces at Ida (neener neener)
Posted by [personal profile] skygiants
I was sold by June plots with Enki to create politically risky art installations

(no subject)

Wed, Mar. 13th, 2013 01:53 pm (UTC)
havocthecat: wendy and lacey from the middleman grinning at each other (middleman wendy lacey)
Posted by [personal profile] havocthecat
Confrontational spoken word performance artists of the world unite. Art crawl!

(no subject)

Thu, Mar. 14th, 2013 11:38 pm (UTC)
skygiants: Wendy from the Middleman making faces at Ida (neener neener)
Posted by [personal profile] skygiants
ART CRAWL!

(no subject)

Wed, Mar. 13th, 2013 02:52 am (UTC)
ambyr: pebbles arranged in a spiral on sand (nature sculpture by Andy Goldsworthy) (Pebbles)
Posted by [personal profile] ambyr
You sell it very well! I was overall unimpressed by Racing the Dark but thought it had flashes of brilliance (mostly in the worldbuilding); I'm willing to give Johnson a second short.

(no subject)

Thu, Mar. 14th, 2013 10:30 pm (UTC)
holyschist: Image of a medieval crocodile from Herodotus, eating a person, with the caption "om nom nom" (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] holyschist
The sequel was tighter, but since the third will probably never be written, I'm not sure I'd totally recommend it. I enjoyed Racing the Dark more then a lot of people, though...

(no subject)

Wed, Mar. 13th, 2013 03:31 am (UTC)
owlectomy: A squashed panda sewing a squashed panda (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] owlectomy
I bought this a little while ago but have been distracted by other things. Really looking forward to reading it now!

(no subject)

Wed, Mar. 13th, 2013 11:10 am (UTC)
crossedwires: toph punches katara to show her affection (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] crossedwires
I actually have this already, but have not read it yet. Must do so immediately! Thanks for the review. It sounds great.

(no subject)

Wed, Mar. 13th, 2013 03:19 pm (UTC)
lnhammer: the Chinese character for poetry, red on white background (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] lnhammer
We actually have this on the living room table, but neither of us has actually started it -- I think these colds got in the way.

---L.

(no subject)

Wed, Mar. 13th, 2013 03:51 pm (UTC)
oracne: turtle (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] oracne
I haven't read this series yet, though I do have the second of the 1920s ones in the TBR.

(no subject)

Wed, Mar. 13th, 2013 08:46 pm (UTC)
oracne: turtle (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] oracne
I am pretty sure she told me there was a third 1920s one after Wicked City, but that it wasn't finished and there were no dates or anything. That was probably at Readercon...but I can't remember if it was 2012 or 2011, and don't know if it's still true. Me, I want all the 1900-1920s-set fiction I can get.

(no subject)

Mon, Mar. 18th, 2013 02:21 am (UTC)
hebethen: (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] hebethen
Dang, I just finished TSP and I would be so down with a series I can't even @_@

(no subject)

Mon, Mar. 18th, 2013 08:47 pm (UTC)
hebethen: (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] hebethen
OMG... TSP FIC........

I am desolated that the nominations for my current two exchanges are already long-closed @______@

(no subject)

Thu, Mar. 14th, 2013 06:18 am (UTC)
cordialcount: (stock › deliquesce)
Posted by [personal profile] cordialcount
This sounds fantastic, both in the details (datastreams! literal sacrifice! complicated matriarchies!) and as a whole. Thanks for reccing it. n__n

(no subject)

Mon, May. 20th, 2013 01:33 am (UTC)
minnaway: (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] minnaway
Thanks for your rec! I picked it up recently based on your rec and just finished it, and wow, what a book! Very successful.

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