Although it has its bleak and very violent moments, there’s also a certain amount of optimism in this story, which ultimately proves to be about family and the hard-won strength of those who survive against all odds. She has a very specific reason for coming to Qaanaaq, and she does not care whom she harms or what plans she disrupts in the course of fulfilling her purpose. But true chaos only enters the city with Masaaraq, a tough warrior woman who travels with her psychically bonded orca and a chained polar bear. Someone is transmitting subversive broadcasts about life in Qaanaaq a gang lord is planning her ascent to the ranks of shareholders a woman seeks to help her mother, who's imprisoned, perhaps unjustly, in an ultrasecure mental hospital a brain-damaged fighter is pressured into becoming an enforcer an ambitious courier becomes a spy and the grandson of a shareholder contracts a sexually transmitted disease that fatally afflicts its carriers with the memories of the previously infected. But what was once a relatively stable system is headed for a shakeup as the gulf between the haves and have-nots widens. Populated by the refugees and descendants of refugees from nations destroyed by social upheaval and environmental disasters, Qaanaaq is run by software while political and economic power rests in the hands of landlords, crime gangs, and the ultrawealthy, never-seen shareholders. Secrets are revealed and a power structure is under threat in this near-future, almost-but-not-quite dystopian tale set in a floating Arctic Circle city.
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