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mburnamfink 's review for:
The Ear, the Eye, and the Arm
by Nancy Farmer
I loved this book back when I was a kid. Cyberpunkish scifi in 22nd century Zimbabwe, with heroic kids, mutant detectives, evil criminals. You can never really go back, so does this book hold up? Well, yes and no.
I didn't realize how much I'd appreciate the main character, Tendai, and his relationship with his younger siblings as he tries to protect them. The future African setting is also well-imagined; as a rising power and real nation that has reach an accord with the legacy of colonialism. Farmer worked in Zimbabwe for years, the the magical-religious elements with spirit possession and witchcraft really kick the story up a notch.
On the minus side, the plot of captivity-escape-captivity is a little repetitive and didactic; a rising series of challenges for Tendai to overcome. The titular mutant detectives are also kind of a dud, speaking with identical voices and rarely using their powers to good effect. In a post -Harry Potter and Hunger Games world, the standards for YA fiction have moved.
I didn't realize how much I'd appreciate the main character, Tendai, and his relationship with his younger siblings as he tries to protect them. The future African setting is also well-imagined; as a rising power and real nation that has reach an accord with the legacy of colonialism. Farmer worked in Zimbabwe for years, the the magical-religious elements with spirit possession and witchcraft really kick the story up a notch.
On the minus side, the plot of captivity-escape-captivity is a little repetitive and didactic; a rising series of challenges for Tendai to overcome. The titular mutant detectives are also kind of a dud, speaking with identical voices and rarely using their powers to good effect. In a post -Harry Potter and Hunger Games world, the standards for YA fiction have moved.