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A review by queer_bookwyrm
Passenger by Alexandra Bracken

adventurous tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.0

4 ⭐ CW: violence, death, slavery mention, racism 

Passenger by Alexandra Bracken is book one in the Passenger duology. This was a duology I picked up at my library's used book sale last summer, and went into it knowing nothing. It's a YA fantasy about time travel, and as you can imagine, it gets pretty wibbly-wobbly timey-wimey (iykyk). Although, it was slower paced than I would have liked, I did enjoy the story. 

We follow Etta, a violinist in NYC who finds herself suddenly thrust back in time to 1776, where she learns that her mother is more than she let on, and she has the ability to travel through "passages" to other times. She is thrust into a timey-wimey plot by the Ironwoods where she must decode her mother's clues to find an object the Ironwood patriarch wants within 8 days. Etta travels with sailor/pirate Nicholas Carter, another traveler who is trying to gain his freedom from the hold of the Ironwoods. His task is to keep Etta from absconding with the object and betray her, but falls for her instead. 

I did not love all the info dumping we get throughout the book. There is so much information given through dialogue that I felt didn't really need to be spelled out to the reader so much. I did like that we see Etta struggle with her own privilege when she is thrust back in time. She is a white woman from the modern era, and has to figure out the ways things work for women in past eras, and also has to be reminded that black people did not have the same rights and had to worry about different things. Nicholas deals with a lot of racism, and Etta is constantly feeling outraged on his behalf, but I felt like it was glossed over a bit. 

I love the idea of the passages to different eras and the scavenger hunt like clues they have to follow. I love a good time paradox. I think the main theme is self-determination, being able to make choices about your own future and the freedom to choose. I enjoyed this book, and I look forward to book two! 

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