Catalog

Record Details

Catalog Search



The art thieves  Cover Image Book Book

The art thieves / Andrea L. Rogers.

Rogers, Andrea L., (author.).

Summary:

It's the year 2052. Stevie Henry is a Cherokee girl working at a museum in Texas, trying to save up enough money to go to college. The world around her is in a cycle of drought and superstorms, ice and fire . but people get by. But it's about to get a whole lot worse. When a mysterious boy shows up at Stevie's museum saying that he's from the future -- and telling her what is to come -- she refuses to believe him. But soon she will have no choice.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781646143788 (hardcover)
  • Physical Description: 384 pages ; 22 cm
  • Publisher: Hoboken, NJ : Levine Querido, 2024.
Subject: Museums > Juvenile fiction.
Thieves > Juvenile fiction.
Time travel > Juvenile fiction.
Museums > Fiction.
Robbers and outlaws > Fiction.
Time travel > Fiction.
Genre: Science fiction.
Young adult fiction.
Dystopian fiction.
Novels.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Tsuga Consortium.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Lakeshore Branch YA Roger 31681010393197 YADULT Available -

  • Baker & Taylor
    In 2052, Stevie, a Cherokee girl working at a museum in Texas, with the world in a constant cycle of drought and superstorm, ice and fire, discovers it’s about to get a whole lot worse when a mysterious boy from the future arrives and tells her what’s to come. Simultaneous eBook.
  • Grand Central Pub

    Nnedi Okorafor meets Angeline Boulley in this gripping story of hope (and time travel!) amid climate collapse

    BEST OF THE YEAR: Shelf Awareness * Cooperative Children's Book Center 

    TO: Angel Wilson (LawAngel@IBLO.gov)
    FROM: Stevie Henry (shenry@gmail.com)
    Thanks for coming to see me; but by the time you read this, it will be too late. No one will have started to panic, yet; but in less than two months nothing will be the same. What came first, The Chicken or the Egg Flu? I wish it mattered. But let’s just say, maybe go back to wearing a mask, bathing in sanitizer, and avoid birds and eggs for a bit…

    I did not kill my brother. I did quite the opposite, really.

    It’s the year 2052. Stevie Henry is a Cherokee girl working at a museum in Texas, trying to save up enough money to go to college. The world around her is in a cycle of drought and superstorms, ice and fire … but people get by. But it’s about to get a whole lot worse.

    When a mysterious boy shows up at Stevie’s museum saying that he’s from the future -- and telling her what is to come -- she refuses to believe him. But soon she will have no choice.

    From the author of the Walter Award-winning Man Made Monsters comes a YA novel that conjures our futures in startling life – the ones that we are headed towards, and the ones we can still work towards. 

    P R A I S E 

    "The Art Thieves is a book that is both exciting to read and deeply thoughtful about our reality as well as the larger literary landscape of post-apocalyptic fiction. I couldn’t put it down, and as soon as I finished reading, I wanted to find something else like it. I even found myself hoping that Rogers might be working on a series. The Art Thieves is reminiscent of Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower and is in conversation with Afrofuturism more broadly." 
    — Southern Review of Books

    ? “Rogers employs smart and empathetic prose to present a realistically rendered science fiction tale that is at once adrenaline-pumping and emotionally moving. In this gripping adventure, Rogers considers the future of Indigenous heritage via an indomitable protagonist who, alongside a plethora of memorably realized characters, navigates tough issues relating to death, familial turmoil, exploitation, and climate collapse.” 
    — Publishers Weekly (starred)

    ? “A stirring story about choosing to create a new future when disaster seems inevitable Rogers's sophomore YA novel skillfully discusses the current affairs, pop culture, and climate-change related extreme weather events of the future and powerfully relates them to historical and contemporary legacies of racism and oppression.... Award-winning author Andrea L. Rogers paints a stunning picture of what it means to hope for a better future and the strength it might take to make that future real.”
    — Shelf-Awareness (starred) 

    “Sharp social commentary folded into an all-too-believable dystopian setting.” 
    —Kirkus


Additional Resources