Pangu's shadow

Karen Bao

Book - 2024

When Ver and Aryl, rival apprentices at the biology lab in the Pangu Star System, become the prime suspects in their teacher's murder, they reluctantly team up to find the real culprit, running up against system-wide inequalities and conspiracies along the way.

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YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Bao Karen
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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Science fiction
Novels
Published
Minneapolis, MN : Carolrhoda Lab [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Karen Bao (author)
Item Description
Includes questions for discussion.
Physical Description
282 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 12-18.
Grades 10-12.
ISBN
9781728477510
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

This YA murder mystery is set in Pangu, a class-based star system where the residents of each moon live very different lives. When Cal, the chief investigator of a medical research lab, is murdered, two of his lab assistants are the prime suspects: Aryl, from Moon 2, often prioritizes dance team over the lab and had a strained relationship with Cal. Ver, Cal's brilliant protégé from Moon 3, often worked late nights with Cal on research that could find a cure for her life-threatening disease--and harbored an unrequited crush. At first, each girl thinks the other is the killer--but on Moon 1, where they are both viewed as second-class citizens, they have three days to find the real killer or spend life in the Sandbag, a penal colony. This genre-blender has disability and queer rep and explores themes of immigration and classism. While an enemies-to-lovers relationship develops a bit too quickly between Aryl and Ver, the characters are distinctive and compelling. This will appeal to readers who love lab settings, murder mysteries, and romance.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Queer teens find love while trying to clear themselves of suspicions of murder in this far-future mystery from Bao (the Dove Chronicles series). Though dancer Aryl Fielding was born on G-Moon One, the crown jewel of the Pangu Star System, she faces discrimination for being the daughter of immigrants from agricultural hub G-Moon Two. Things are even harder for Ver Yun, who hails from manufacturing center G-Moon Three and, like many Three-ers, lives with a degenerative disease. To please her parents, Aryl is completing a research apprenticeship at the Institute for Natural Exploration--something she'd enjoy more if not for demanding boss Cal Eppi and brilliant, brownnosing fellow apprentice Ver. Meanwhile, Ver resents Aryl's physical strength and grace. The trio is working late one night when the power fails, and someone kills Cal. Police charge Aryl and Ver, largely out of prejudice, so the duo joins forces to solve the murder. Secondary characters lack depth, and the denouement is too pat. Bao nevertheless writes incisively and empathetically about Ver's physical impairments, and Aryl and Ver's alternating narration capably ferry a spirited plot, during which tender romance sparks. The cast is intersectionally diverse. Ages 12--up. Agent: Veronica Park, Fuse Literary. (Feb.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Two teen girls accused of murdering their boss will be sent to their moon's penal colony unless they can find the real killer. Seventeen-year-old Aryl Fielding's true passion is dance, but her coveted research apprenticeship at the Institute for Natural Exploration honors her parents' sacrifices as immigrants from agricultural G-Moon Two to affluent G-Moon One. Sixteen-year-old black-haired and olive-skinned Ver Yun left her industrially ravaged home of G-Moon Three to apprentice at the lab so she could search for a cure for the degenerative disease that has left her disabled. Aryl, who has "bronze skin and mahogany ringlets," sees Ver as an opportunistic know-it-all; Ver thinks Aryl is a slacker who skates by on her intimidating physical superiority. When Investigator Cal Eppi, the girls' supervisor, is murdered, the police automatically charge them, the immigrant offworlders. With only days left until their trial, they move from mutual distrust to working together. As their rivalry turns to romance, they take on powerful people who are hiding big secrets. This dual-perspective tale maintains a vivid connection to each narrator's voice while keeping up an exciting pace and unfurling a satisfying mystery. The portrayals of queer people, immigrant families, and those living with chronic pain and disability are well executed in this work, which is set in a world infused with Asian cultural elements. Hard to put down: a strongly written work that pulls no punches while providing much-needed representation. (author's note, discussion questions) (Science fiction mystery. 13-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.