Reviews for The heirs

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

When a billionaire is found dead on his yacht, his teenage children become suspects. Sixteen years ago, billionaire Leontes Button, founder of the global sensation Button Games, a puzzle and toy company, infamously embarked on a test of his provocative theory about nature versus nurture, despite ethical concerns from the scientific community. Button hypothesized that a child taken from an orphanage could be made into a genius. His five “experiments (also known as his children)” unknowingly sealed their fate as babies by crawling toward objects that represented specific fields of achievement. Adopted from countries around the world, they were subjected to tutoring, strictly controlled diets, and countless hours of practice to mold them into true prodigies. Now 17, Fola the Brain, Octavius the Maestro, Bilal the Olympian, Perdita the Artist, and Romeo the Failure struggle to have relationships with their father—or with one another. The siblings reluctantly reunite for Leontes’ annual Prodigy Ball at Button Manor in New York’s Westchester County. But when their father is found dead, all the attendees, themselves included, are suspects. The story’s premise leads readers to expect a mystery-filled thriller, but Àbíké-Íyímídé instead delivers a complex story about a broken family that unfortunately lacks the emotional punch to be truly compelling. Even as secrets are revealed, readers will feel as if key information is missing from the story. An anticlimactic family drama.(Mystery. 14-18) Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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