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Fable for the End of the World

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 14 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 14 weeks

The Last of Us meets The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes in this stand-alone dystopian romance about survival, sacrifice, and love that risks everything.

By encouraging massive accumulations of debt from its underclass, a single corporation, Caerus, controls all aspects of society.

Inesa lives with her brother in a half-sunken town where they scrape by running a taxidermy shop. Unbeknownst to Inesa, their cruel and indolent mother has accrued an enormous debt—enough to qualify one of her children for Caerus's livestreamed assassination spectacle: the Lamb's Gauntlet.

Melinoë is a Caerus assassin, trained to track and kill the sacrificial Lambs. The product of neural reconditioning and physiological alteration, she is a living weapon, known for her cold brutality and deadly beauty. She has never failed to assassinate one of her marks.

When Inesa learns that her mother has offered her as a sacrifice, at first she despairs—the Gauntlet is always a bloodbath for the impoverished debtors. But she's had years of practice surviving in the apocalyptic wastes, and with the help of her hunter brother she might stand a chance of staying alive.

For Melinoë, this is a game she can't afford to lose. Despite her reputation for mercilessness, she is haunted by painful flashbacks. After her last Gauntlet, where she broke down on livestream, she desperately needs redemption.

As Mel pursues Inesa across the wasteland, both girls begin to question everything: Inesa wonders if there's more to life than survival, while Mel wonders if she's capable of more than killing.

And both wonder if, against all odds, they might be falling in love.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 6, 2025
      A trained mercenary falls in love with her mark in this grim dystopia from Reid (A Study in Drowning). After undergoing intense physical and psychological reconditioning, teenage Melinoë becomes an assassin for Caerus, the corporation that controls New Amsterdam through civilian debt. Meanwhile, 17-year-old Inesa has spent her life trying to keep her family afloat. Then Inesa’s mother stakes her for the Gauntlet—a livestreamed, 13-day hunt—to wipe out significant debt. Seeking redemption following a previous traumatic Gauntlet, Mel determines to kill Inesa, who enlists her brother Luka’s help in shaking off would-be killers. Though each girl desperately needs the other to fail, their attraction threatens to upend the Gauntlet and Caerus’s hold on New Amsterdam. An immersive setting rendered via descriptive prose ferries this invigorating story, which questions the nature of humanity, survival, and memory. Though plot points anchored on genre influences such as the Hunger Games series sometimes feel limiting, Reid deviates from the expected through the leisurely unspooling of Mel and Inesa’s dueling POVs and their heart-pounding sapphic romance. Characters are described with varying skin tones. Ages 14–up. Agent: Sarah Landis, Sterling Lord Literistic.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from January 15, 2025
      A 17-year-old girl leading a hardscrabble existence in a post-apocalyptic society controlled by the all-encompassing corporation Caerus fights to survive. Inesa Yael Soulis lives with her younger brother, Luka, and their cruel mother in the waterlogged Lower Esopus neighborhood. While Inesa is working at the family taxidermy shop, which she runs with Luka, a Mask--a Caerus employee--walks in and announces that their mother nominated Inesa for the Lamb's Gauntlet. The Gauntlet is a livestreamed challenge in which Angels, or lab-modified humans, hunt and kill Lambs to pay off citizens' debts. Shortly before the competition is due to begin, Inesa and Luka go on the run. Meanwhile, Melino�, one of the Angels engineered to be killing machines (who are "just human enough to feel"), is glitching. Painful memories seep through even as she sets forth to nab her Lamb before she can escape. As Inesa and Melino� battle, a connection sparks, blurring the lines between hunter and hunted. In this brilliantly imagined work, the impoverished are terrorized not only by the environment but by the government, and women's bodies are morphed and mutated to men's ideals. This masterful queer narrative encourages readers to question messages around gender and sexuality as humanity triumphs through persistence, acts of rebellion, and small victories against the backdrop of a dark and damning setting with worldbuilding that doesn't disappoint. Most characters present white. A thrilling, page-turning must-read: prescient and necessary, impressive and disturbing.(Post-apocalyptic. 14-18)

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from February 1, 2025
      Grades 8-12 *Starred Review* The world hasn't ended, but it's certainly drowning, while two diametrically opposed teenagers try their best to stay afloat. Inesa barely makes ends meet in her soaked and sinking town, creating taxidermy out of the few non-mutated animals her brother Luka hunts and providing for her cruel, hypochondriac mother. Melino� lives in luxury but is an assassin who works the Lamb's Gauntlet, a livestreamed spectacle that clears debts and draws views; she's struggling to keep it together following her last hit. Inesa soon finds out she's the next Lamb, thanks to her mother's compulsive spending and health care, and Melino� has a chance to prove herself to her proxy guardian, Azrael. As the Gauntlet starts, neither expects to accidentally fall off the grid, and the two find they'll need each other if they want to survive. In this stunningly crafted novel, Reid displays an eye for human connection with her enemies-to-lovers Sapphic romance and portrayal of complex familial relationships. Inesa and Mel are thoughtful foils to each other, their characteristics bleeding together as they survive the Gauntlet and the ramifications of climate change, which are depicted realistically as painful. Fraught with social commentary as well, Reid's tale touches on the dangers of debt and late-stage capitalism, the addiction to screens and technology, and the realities of corporations buying out governments. Suzanne Collins fans, meet your new favorite dystopia.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      Starred review from March 1, 2025

      Gr 10 Up-In an irradiated New York, where a Hunger Games-esque event occurs year-round as a livestream called the Gauntlet, the ruling megacorporation Caerus pits debtors against their powerful Angels. Angels are girls who have been sliced apart by Caerus and put back together: a beautiful face covering titanium bones, a prosthetic eye that can track any target, years of training to be the perfect hunters. Anyone owing more than 500,000 credits can be chosen for the Gauntlet-or offer a child in their place. Inesa and her brother work hard to never let their accounts go red, despite living in poverty in Esopus Creek. Their abusive mother doesn't have their restraint and puts Inesa up for the Gauntlet rather than pay her debts. Melino�, an Angel determined to redeem herself after a botched Gauntlet, is sent after her a few hours later into the Catskills. The enemies-to-lovers story does not qualify as a romance by genre standards, but the ending sparks enough hope to anchor it. The brutal reality of the heroines may be bleak for younger teens. Reid is well regarded for her lyrical writing and nuanced characters; here she paints a vivid portrait of a world fallen to climate change and capitalism, juxtaposed against the ways love is redemptive. Inesa's family is ancestrally Jewish, Melino� is white. Content warnings for institutionalized rape, nonconsensual voyeurism, and brainwashing. VERDICT A dark dystopian novel for readers craving something more mature than The Hunger Games. Perfect for high school collections.-Emmy Neal

      Copyright 2025 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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