Donna Barba Higuera’s ALEBRIJES gets starred Kirkus review!
Thirteen-year-old Leandro Rivera and his 9-year-old sister, Gabi, brave the harsh reality of a segregated settlement in post-apocalyptic California.
Spanish-speaking Cascabeles like Leandro are forced to work the fields to provide for elite English-speaking Pocatelans or risk exile and certain death in the desolate and dangerous monster-filled outside world. Descended from farmers who worked the land before the calamity that made everything barren, the orphaned siblings, who survive as pickpockets, face discrimination within the city’s walls and are threatened with deadly punishment for even minor offenses. Leandro and Gabi hatch a plan to escape from their oppressors, live free in the wild, and return to the ways of their people. Their plans derail, however, when Leandro is banished for stealing after he covers for Gabi’s impulsive theft of a strawberry. But Leandro’s magical transformation leads to a breathtaking discovery that could transform the lives of everyone in Pocatel. In Leandro’s hero’s journey, alebrijes are brilliantly cast as animalistic machines from another era and saviors of the living. The story examines how people can build better societies from the ashes of unequal, oppressive, and corrupt ones. Softly rendered black-and-white illustrations evoke the terrors and wonders of a broken world through a child’s eyes. Strong worldbuilding uses the familiar and the fantastic to prod readers to consider the story’s parallels to real-world injustices and the ethics of power, storytelling, and greed.
This heartfelt adventure signals hope for humanity, even in the aftermath of darkness.