When You Had Power (Nothing is Promised 1)
Publisher Description
For better, for worse. In sickness and in health.
It’s a legal vow of care for families in 2050, a world beset by waves of climate-driven plagues.
Power engineer Lucía Ramirez long ago lost her family to one—she’d give anything to take that vow. The Power Islands give humanity a fighting chance, but tending kelp farms and solar lilies is a lonely job. The housing AI found her a family match, saying she should fit right in with the Senegalese retraining expert who’s a force of nature, the ex-Pandemic Corps cook with his own cozy channel, and even the writer who insists everything is stories, all the way down. This family of literal and metaphorical refugees could be the shelter she’s seeking from her own personal storm.
She needs this one to work.
Then an unscheduled power outage and a missing turtle-bot crack open a mystery. Something isn’t right on Power Island One, but every step she takes to solve it, someone else gets there first—and they’re determined to make her unsee what she’s seen. Lucía is an engineer, not a detective, but fixing this problem might cost her the one thing she truly needs: a home.
When You Had Power is the first of four tightly-connected hopepunk novels in a near-future climate-fiction series. It’s about our future, how society will shift and flex like a solar lily in the storms of our own making, and how breaks in the social fabric have to be expected, tended to, and healed. Because we’re in this together, now more than ever before.
If you enjoyed the optimistic climate solutions in Kim Stanley Robinson’s Ministry for the Future or the cozy cooperative future in Becky Chambers’ Monk and Robot series, you will enjoy Nothing is Promised.
Customer Reviews
Getting to net zero
The science of solving the energy crisis is so interesting. I like the way it’s sprinkled throughout the book so it doesn’t feel like homework. It’s the story of a young adult finding a family to belong to, I liked it.
When You Had Power
A nice light read that features a diverse cast of characters with an emphasis on chosen family. Research is evident in the writing, which alternates between technical and heartfelt where it could be more cohesive. I do question why Lucia only got a one day suspension instead of straight up getting fired. It seems an unnecessary risk to an illegal operation in which tons of resources had already been invested.
When you had power
Interesting want more descriptions and details