Reviews for The light at the bottom of the world

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

In 2099, London is underwater.Sixteen-year-old Leyla McQueen, a Muslim submersible racer, will stop at nothing to find her father, Hashem, who has been arrested and charged with encouraging "seasickness sufferers to take their lives." When she is picked as an entrant in the London Submersible Marathon, Leyla is determined to win and ask the prime minister for her father's freedom. But things do not go as planned, and when Leyla learns that her father is not really being detained in London as she'd been told, she leaves, evading the Blackwatch security forces who are kept busy overseeing New Year's celebrations. Leyla, along with unwanted partner Ari, the son of a family friend, must drive her submersible through waters she has never before navigated. Along the way, she learns that she must question the statements of a corrupt government, as themes in the story echo issues in the present day. Debut novelist Shah vividly describes a world below the ocean's surface, evoking people's nostalgia for the Old World, when Great Britain lay aboveground. Leyla's character grows and changes over the course of her journey, her love and loyalty toward her family only growing stronger. Leyla is Pashtun and of Afghan heritage; diversity in the book reflects that of contemporary London.This thrilling journey packed with unexpected discoveries will leave readers eager for plot resolutions in the next installment. (Science fiction. 12-17) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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