FICTION

Love Is the Drug

352p. Scholastic/Arthur A. Levine. Sept. 2014. Tr $17.99. ISBN 9780545417815; ebk. $17.99. ISBN 9780545662895.
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Gr 10 Up—Her mother calls her Emily, but she calls herself by her last name, Bird, and so does Alonso, known as Coffee, the strangely compelling drug-dealer and diplomat's son who attends Bird's private Washington, DC, school. When Bird wakes up after eight days in a coma to discover she was drugged at a party and left with no memory of what happened, she turns to Coffee for help—even though the authorities, including the mysterious Roosevelt, insist that he was the one who poisoned her. But Emily suspects that Roosevelt, her boyfriend Paul, and possibly even her scientist parents are involved in a conspiracy: a conspiracy that is connected to the Venezuelan flu, a virus planted by terrorists that is currently killing hundreds of thousand around the globe. The author of The Summer Prince (Scholastic, 2013) writes beautifully, but the convoluted premise can be tough to swallow, and the lyrical quality of her writing does not always mesh with the high-octane plot. The story is strongest when following Bird, a self-described "assimilated" DC black girl, as she tries to stay true to herself amid not only the terror of the quarantine, but also the restrictive expectations and assumptions of her family and classmates. Teens looking for a fast-paced tale with diverse characters will find it in Johnson's latest offering.—Eliza Langhans, Hatfield Public Library, MA
The near-future United States has been hit by a flu pandemic, thought to be an act of terrorism. When Emily Bird wakes up from a coma after attending a strange government party, she doesn't know what secrets she has hidden from herself, or whom she can trust. Johnson combines evocative writing with the plot of a suspenseful thriller in her engaging character-driven novel.
In the near future, the United States has been hit by a flu pandemic, thought to be an act of terrorism. Even at Emily Bird's prestigious, insulated private prep school, tensions and suspicions run high. When Bird wakes up from a coma after attending a strange government party, she doesn't know what secrets she has hidden from herself, or whom she can trust to find out. Bird turns to an enigmatic drug-dealer peer for help sifting through conspiracy theories and evading curfews for the truth. Whatever knowledge lies in her memory has drawn attention from a menacing operative, and she must choose between uncovering a dangerous mystery and protecting her own future. Johnson (The Summer Prince, rev. 3/13) combines evocative writing with the plot of a suspenseful thriller in her engaging, and character-driven, novel. Bird is a true-to-life teenage heroine. Her bewilderment in the midst of political duplicity balances the intricate plot with relatable concerns about love, family, and friendship. Plenty of drama within the diverse cast of supporting characters provides excellent social context for issues the whole country has to face. The metaphorical language can seem heavy-handed when featured in dialogue, but it also gives Bird a strong narrative voice and a vivid point of view. sarah berman

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