![]() ![]() ![]() In her debut novel, Engel employs the first-person, present-tense style that’s almost de rigueur in this genre. ![]() Ivy, outspoken and reckless, soon realizes that Bishop is gentle, thoughtful and guilty of nothing, which presents her with a terrible dilemma: “If I kill Bishop, my family will be in power, but Bishop will be dead and what will I be? A murderer.” When Ivy is given an ultimatum to poison Bishop, she faces a terrible decision. ![]() Nervous as any young girl might be about marrying a stranger, Ivy has an additional burden: She has promised her family that she will kill her new husband so as to aid the rebellion. Now Ivy, 16, must marry Bishop Lattimer-son of the president, who had Ivy’s mother killed. To soothe old wounds, the town instituted a tradition: Sons of the winning side marry the daughters of the losers, and vice versa. He now rules autocratically rather than heading up the democracy Westfall favored. A small town of less than 10,000 survivors was founded by narrator Ivy Westfall’s grandfather, but President Lattimer’s father won the struggle for control. Two generations ago, nuclear war almost destroyed the world. In this YA novel set in a post-apocalyptic future, a teenage girl is charged by her family with killing the president’s son-who is also her new husband. ![]()
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