Global Dystopia

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4.5 / 5

"Asteroid fallout, carbon emissions, and radioaxon releases all had something in common: Time was the best medicine. Climate might change. oceans might rise. Species might mutate, or vanish. But given enough time, nature would do what nature does best: break down the elements that didn't belong."

Yeah- if that quote above didn't do it for you then.. I don't know what because it certain obliterated my mind and thought process, and it is just one example of many via Joan's thought provoking prose. If I'm being honest, I have not read that many activist books for the environment besides Winterkeep, which is a fantasy book in another world, but The Ones We're Meant to Find just sucker punched me into another stratosphere. I couldn't put it down because the characters were so dynamic and visceral. I couldn't think about anything besides climate change and dystopia futures where our earth tries to kill us more than humanity already does... and just WOW. Wow was the only word to come to mind after I finished. It may sound cliché or boring, but it's truly what I was left feeling/ thinking.

"We're nothing as timeless as stars in orbit. More like two grains of sand before the tide rushes in. Here, then not. Human."

For starters, Cee and Kasey are two very different characters- not only through their differing points of view (one in first and the other in third)- but also through their goals, hopes, and grief. Cee has been stuck on an island for three years, desperately trying to find her way home to her sister Kay. While Kasey on the other hand, griefs for her (potentially) dead sister Celia and struggles with the impending doom of humanity due to environmental destruction. I don't really want to say anything more than this because part of the beauty/ intrigue of this novel is going in blind. You'll enjoy it 110% more if you know next to nothing. The story unfolds in such a powerful way that I never would want anyone to experience it differently.

"None of us live without consequence. Our personal preferences are not truly personal. One person's needs will deny another's. Our privileges can harm ourselves and others."

The reason this is not a full five star rating comes down to the fact that Kasey did not interest me as much until about halfway into the novel, and this isn't me saying she's boring by any means, but Cee was so enthralling that I had a hard time switching back to Kasey. After finishing the book, I think I would enjoy Kasey's POV to a deeper level than my initial read through because I know everything now. Kasey is very interesting once all these pieces come together. Maybe when I reread my rating will change, but for now I'm going to leave it.

"The sea was a trillion strands of hair, infinitely tangled on the surface and infinitely dense beneath. It distorted time: Minutes passed like hours and hours passed like minutes out there. It distorted space, made the horizon seem within reach. And it was the perfect place for hiding secrets."

Overall, this is definitely going on my Top Reads of 2021 list. This is the sort of dystopia, sci-fi I've been searching for, and I'm so thankful to Joan for writing it. It did more than engross me and that's all I ever ask from a writer. Joan He will always be an auto-buy author for me, so I urge you all to step into this futuristic world of humanity. Journey into this terrifying world and let me know what you think once on the other side.

TW: environmental destruction/ natural disasters, major grief, suicide, drowning, isolation, gas lighting, terminal illness, death of a parent (off-screen), violence, and murder (off-screen). I may have missed a few other TW's, but these are the one's that stuck out to me upon reflection. I try to typically write triggers as I read, but I was so enraptured by the book that I forgot sometimes to do it.