Exclusive First Read: 'The Summer Prince' By Alaya Dawn Johnson
by NPR Staff
The Summer Prince is Alaya
Dawn Johnson's first young adult novel. She lives in New York City.
Hundreds of years into the future, in a
post-apocalyptic world, there's a beautiful city in a steel-and-glass pyramid,
perched on a Brazilian bay. It's Palmares Tres, founded and run by women after
men made a wreck of the world, and named for a famous 17th century city founded
by escaped slaves. The city runs on a combination of futuristic technology and
ancient, bloody ritual: Every five years, a Summer King is elected by the
people and sacrificed at the end of the year. Alaya Dawn Johnson's gorgeous
young adult novel The Summer Prince
follows two teenage Palmarinas, June Costa and her best friend, Gil, as they
navigate the treacherous intersections between art, politics, technology and
love. In this scene, June remembers being 8 years old and seeing her first
Summer King die. The Summer Prince will be published March 1.
When I was eight, my papai took me to the park to
watch a king die.
At first, all I saw were adults clad in bright blues
and greens and reds, in feathers and sequins, in cloth glittering with gold and
jewels. Carnival clothes for carnival day, but covered in the early-morning
chill with darker coats and shawls. I looked up at this mass of grandes like I
had stumbled into a gathering of orixás. I couldn't see their faces, but I
could see their hands, the way they twisted them around each other, or clicked
through a string of rosary beads. Some held candles, some held flowers. They
were dressed for carnival, but they were quieter than I remembered from other
years. The legs and torsos swayed and jostled, but no one danced. A few of the
men cried. For the first time in my life, I knew a carnival without music.
I held my papai's hand. He did not look at me. A strange
sigh swept over the crowd, like the wind howling past the cliffside during a
winter storm. A woman's voice boomed through the park, but I was too young, too
close to the ground to understand.
"I can't see," I said, tugging at my papai's
hand.
With some difficulty — our neighbors had pressed
forward, packing around us so tightly he hardly had room to turn around — he
knelt.
"This is how the world works, June," he said
to me. "Are you sure?"
I didn't understand his downcast mouth, the crying
from the crowd, the austere finality of the woman's voice on our city's
speakers. Carnival was supposed to be fun and beautiful. But I knew, because my
papai never asked me idle questions, that I was to consider my answer. That if
I said no, he would leave me on the ground where I could see nothing I didn't
understand, and understand nothing of what I heard. And if I said yes, the
answer would change my life.
I nodded. He lifted me, though I was heavy for my age,
and perched me on his shoulders. If I blocked anyone's view, no one complained.
There was a holo in the sky. It projected a few meters
above the heads of the people in the park, near the falls where I would play
with Mamãe in the summer. Queen Serafina stood in a stark room of wood and
stone — the high shrine. I liked her because her skin was dark and glossy and
her hair silk-smooth. I had even gotten a Queen Serafina doll for my birthday
last June. But today her face was fierce and still; today she held a blade in
her hand.
Beside me, a man shook his head and murmured a prayer.
I thought it sounded nice and wished I could join him. Mamãe didn't like the
city shrines, so I'd never learned any prayers.
The holo angle widened, showing an altar with a
miniature projection of our city glowing at the far end. A man had been bound
with ropes beneath it, so the great hollow pyramid of Palmares Três looked like
a crown. An appropriate symbol for our latest king, elected exactly one year
ago.
Alden Ford/Arthur A. Levine Books
"Why is Summer King Fidel tied down?" I
asked Papai.
He squeezed my hand and shushed me gently.
"Watch, June," he said.
"I honor our ancestors who were slaves, and their
legacy for which we have named our city," Serafina said, icy and calm in
her white ceremonial turban and white shift.
From the altar, Fidel responded in a steady voice, but
his shoulders trembled and his eyes had dilated a permanent, unnatural black.
"I honor the dead who have fallen like sugarcane before a scythe. I honor
the men who lie beneath us and the women whose strength and wisdom have saved us."
"Heir of Zumbi, great king, you are
infected," the Queen said, words almost familiar and ultimately
incomprehensible. "Will you give this great city the gift of your
sacrifice? In the name of Yemanjá, in the name of Oxalá, also called Christ,
will you offer your soul to the orixás, and your choice to Palmares Três?"
Fidel nodded slowly, as though he was already swimming
in Yemanjá's ocean. His too-black eyes stared wide, and I shivered. We were
safe in the park on Tier Eight, while he was tied to the altar on Tier Ten, but
still I felt as though he watched me. "I will," he said, and fell
back, prone on the stone altar.
Now the man beside me wept openly, and even Papai
wiped his eyes.
I was eight, and no one had told me what happened to
the kings at the end of winter. In the end, no one needed to.
Serafina mounted the stairs to the altar. She touched
Fidel's shoulder with her left hand; her right fingers tightened around the
blade.
"You will mark your choice of the woman to be
Queen," Serafina said. "In gesture or blood."
He nodded. A few seconds passed. She swept the knife
across his throat, clean and irrevocable and deep. His mouth opened and closed
like a fish in fresh air. His blood pulsed in spurts over her hands and dress
and altar.
I cried, but I didn't want to stop seeing. "He
must point!" I said, my stomach so tight I thought I might vomit.
The crying man beside me nodded. "It will be okay
if he doesn't, filha," he said. "It's a moon year. Serafina is the
only one in the room for him to pick."
I don't know that I understood him then. The five-year
cycle, the elections, the Queens and their kings, the moon years and sun years
—they govern our lives, but are not easily parsed. Especially not by an
eight-year-old, shocked to tears by the sight of a young king killed by a
beloved Queen.
And then Fidel managed. A bloody hand raised,
trembling and final. He smacked it on Serafina's belly with enough force that
its wet impact echoed over the tinkling of the falls. A bloody handprint marked
her stomach, final and sure.
The holo focused on Fidel's body. In death, his eyes
stayed wide open and impossibly black.
Papai took me home. Mamãe was in one of her rages,
berating him for letting such a violent ceremony mar my carnival day.
"You'll let her have the celebration without
showing her why?" he said.
"She's too young," said Mamãe.
I took a deep breath. "Did he want to die?"
I asked Papai.
He regarded me very seriously. "I believe so,
June. His sacrifice helps our city."
"Then it's okay," I said. "I'm old
enough."
We call him the summer king, even though we choose him
in the spring.
It is early September. Gil and I dance through a
screaming throng of wakas, hoping to trick our way into the roped-off section
in the front of the stadium. In a few minutes, all three young finalists for
this year's summer king election will appear onstage, and we need to be as near
to them as possible. I've never seen Enki up close before — holos don't count —
and my excitement makes me feel like I'm vibrating. Gil turns, sees my eyes
scanning the stage for any sign of them, and laughs.
"We have at least five minutes, June," he
says, taking my hand to pull me forward.
"What if we miss him? What if the cameras don't
see us?"
Gil shrugs; he respects my craving for fame and
recognition, but he doesn't share it. One of the hundred things I love about
him.
"It doesn't matter if they see," he says,
pointing to the cloud of thumb-sized camera bots buzzing on and around the
stage. "It matters if he
does."
He. Enki. I take a deep breath and feel my pocket
again for the reassuring weight of the portable holo we've smuggled inside.
Just a week ago, Gil and I got around security bots in Gria Plaza to paint
graffiti stencils on the side of an office building, but we've never attempted
anything as daring as this. I've never invited exposure before. Oh, there was
always a chance that some security bot would dart me and I'd wake up unmasked
in a holding cell on Tier Two, but I'm not stupid. I may not be quite as good
at running around the city as a grafiteiro from the verde, but I'm tiers above
the other wakas in my school.
But today I'm dressed as myself, with a ticket bought
in my own name, with my own money. Today we're planning to get caught. Mother
and Auntie Yaha won't be pleased, but they never are. I think of it as a
coming-out party — if this works, the whole city will see my art for the first
time.
The stadium is the pride of the bottom tiers — built
inside one of the dozens of spherical nodes that help give our hollow pyramid
city its internal structure. The clear dome soars above us, high enough that on
some days wispy clouds can form, obscuring from sight the pulsing, glowing city
rising into the distance above. From this angle, transport pods shuttle through
a glittering lattice of tubes like silver blood through luminous triangular
arteries. Megatrusses lined with gardens and shops and houses stretch to our
left and right. I'm caught off guard by the spectacle, one somehow more
familiar to me from dramas than personal experience. Even though I've lived
here all my life, I don't spend much time on the lower tiers during the day.
Growing up on Tier Eight, I'm used to seeing the glowing pyramid lattice of
Palmares Três from a loftier position.
Two guards stand in front of the velvet curtain
separating the special seats from the general rabble. My stepmother is an
Auntie, a rising star in our government. I could have asked her for help
getting in here, but then she would have known that Gil and I were skipping
school to see the show. I couldn't bear the thought of another interminable
argument with Mother, Auntie Yaha acting as frustrated peacekeeper. I can't
bear very much about either of them.
So Gil and I will have to improvise. I grin and my
worries flow out of me in the tense, gritty joy of danger and release. The
guards check tickets with a bulky security fono. Only wakas are allowed in this
special section, since we're the ones the Aunties want to show asking questions
in a moon year election. Some grandes fill the stadium seats, but most of this
crowd is under thirty and respected for it — a rarity in a city run mostly by
women past their first century.
Gil squeezes my hand and approaches one of the guards.
He casually hands over his flash — an identity chip embedded in the same worn
pyramid charm he's used since I've known him. The guard swipes it over her
fono, then frowns.
"You don't have a pass," she says.
Gil's bottom lip trembles and his eyes widen.
"But I won the essay contest for my school! My teacher told me everything
was settled."
The woman sighs. The other guard, accepting latecomer
flashes a few meters away, raises her eyebrows in inquiry.
"Everything okay there?" she asks.
"He says he won a contest."
The second guard looks nervously back at the stage,
then walks over. "What's this about . . ." she says, but I don't have
time to hear the rest. In full sight of the five wakas still waiting to get in,
I dash past the guards distracted by Gil's beautiful pouting face and hurry for
two empty seats on the opposite side of the enclosure. I sit like I'm supposed
to be there, and no one pays me much attention. Everyone stares at the stage. I
hope most of them support Enki. He's the surprise favorite this election, the
beautiful boy from the verde no one expected to make it to the finals. He will
win — he has to — but just to make sure, I convinced Gil to help me with an art
project.
A very public art project.
The glass dome turns smoky gray, gradually darkening
the stadium until I can only see the lights on the stage and the smaller lights
on the floor, leading to the exits. A moment later, Gil slips into the seat
beside me. He bites his lip and squeezes my knee.
"I can't believe they let you in!" I
whisper.
He rests his head against mine and breathes deep.
"You know me, menina," he says. "All I ever have to do is
smile."
I jab him with my elbow. My best friend in the whole
world is vain as a peacock, but that's all right. He's pretty enough to justify
it.
Auntie Isa, the highest-ranking member of the
government aside from Queen Oreste, walks onstage in a careful spotlight.
Cheers and chants sweep over the stadium audience until my ears ring with the
combined jubilation of ten thousand people. Gil yells Enki's name in unison
with a hundred or so others nearby, while different factions for Pasqual and
Octavio chant their support. I would join Gil, but I can hardly breathe. I've
been planning this for weeks, ever since I first saw Enki at the start of the
contests.
Auntie Isa has round cheeks and full lips, skin about
as light as mine and smooth, thin eyebrows that seem faded somehow — the only
part of her that looks old. Beneath her iconic red turban, her face is ageless
and familiar. She's been sub-queen for more than fifty years —five Queens have
reigned with her by their side, but she's never put herself forward for the
royal position.
"My children," she says once the noise has
quieted. "I welcome you to King Alonso Stadium. In a week, the whole city
will once again vote for our next king. I have gathered the finalists here this
afternoon so that you might ask questions of these fine young men who have put
themselves forward this moon year."
Our cacophonous cheers might be deafening to some
grande, but I don't notice. I've found my voice, and I'm screaming with the
rest. Even if something goes wrong with my small project, it won't matter. I'm
overwhelmed with the sense of being part of history.
* * *
The first thing you should know about Enki is that
he's dark. Darker than the coffee my mother and Auntie Yaha drink every
morning, darker than the sky on a moonless night, not so dark as my pupils gone
wide with pleasure, not so dark as ink. I have never seen anyone half so dark
as him, though Auntie Yaha says she has. She travels to the flat cities
sometimes, since she's an ambassador of Palmares Três. She's even been to
Salvador — what's left of it. Most people don't have the tech to maintain
appearance standards, she says.
"Though they wouldn't, even if they could,"
she always says, and flicks her wrist in her way that always means contemptuous
dismissal. "We don't wallow in our differences the way flatlanders
do."
I never understood what that meant until Enki. His
mother lived in Salvador, they say, though I can't believe it, because I've
seen the pictures and I don't understand how anyone
could live there. She was six months pregnant with him when the Aunties granted
her a rare amnesty pass. She was too late for all but the most basic gene mods.
There was no time to conform to our appearance regulations, and all the better
for him. Enki was born dark as molasses, not so dark as tar. Enki was born
beautiful, and when he smiles, you can see he knows it. Perhaps he isn't so
sure of its importance, but how he delights in our admiration.
The second thing you should know about Enki is that he
grew up in the verde. At the top of our pyramid a great white light shines
above the bay. The Queen lives there, way up on the hallowed Tier Ten, with a
few of the highest-ranking Aunties. Tiers Eight and Nine are for less important
Aunties and their functionaries. And so on until you reach the bottom. Until
you find the verde.
Algae vats line the fortified concrete of the pyramid
base like a string of giant fake emeralds — glass baubles filled with hints of
brown and roiling green. When the waves hit them, they shake and bob. I've been
out in the bay a few times, just to see what we look like from the outside
(it's so easy to forget, sometimes, that there is an outside, and we should
never forget). Tour boats are popular in the evening, so everyone can goggle at
the flaming red sunset as it sparks off the metal and glass trusses. They say
if you catch it at the right moment, the sun looks like a ruby placed by an
orixá in the top of the pyramid.
I didn't think so. Mother took me out in celebration
when she married Auntie Yaha. I didn't see a crown jewel, though. I saw blood.
It drenched the great hollow pyramid of our city in the bay, spilling down the
sides, over the megatrusses and transport pods and round plazas. I didn't look
at the sun — even the protective glasses they gave us lay forgotten in my hand.
I looked at the base, where the waves crash and the algae vats bobble. On the
terraces between the vats, a few dozen people, comically tiny at such a
distance, stared at us. None waved.
We call it the catinga, the stink, but they call it
the verde. Green.
I'd never thought to ask why, before that moment. How can they stand the smell? is
the standard question. The kind of idle discussion second only to the weather.
But the base of our pyramid is beautiful. Amid all that blood of the dying sun,
the verde was still alive.
The blue of the bay, the green of the verde. A rich
girl on a boat, wary of a new mother and still grieving for her lost father.
And a boy? Is he among the inscrutable figures
watching me watch them? Darker than the rest, but with the bright white of his
smile, the light brown of his eyes and the skin of his palms? Does he laugh at
us with his friends, or does he stare and wonder who I am?
Enki is from the verde, which means he grew up poor.
It means he grew up with the ever-present stink of hydrogen-producing algae. It
means that in the winter, when the cyclones roll in off the coast, he's stayed
up nights listening to the thunderous crashing. It means that if he came up
from the verde, unless he was very careful, he would carry its smell with him,
its look and its poverty, and he would be judged for it.
The third thing you should know about Enki is that he
wants to die.
He doesn't seem like that kind of boy, I know. They
almost never do. But he wants to be a summer king, and so he wants to die.
Gil and I don't talk about it much. What's the point?
That's what it means to be summer king. Their choice of the Queen wouldn't
matter if they didn't die to make it.
But I can't help but think about that day on the boat,
and the silent, almost motionless figures suspended in the lurid green.
What is it like, to grow up beautiful in the verde?
Three finalists, and one will be king. They're seated
on three chairs, facing the crowd like degree candidates at university. Pasqual
to the left, his eyes lowered, perhaps out of humility, but more likely because
he knows how the wakas swoon over his lashes. Pasqual is tall; he looks like a
dandelion — a weed with a wild thatch of unusually red-tinged hair that seems
to draw the cameras to him like flies to a picnic. He arranges angelic orchestrations
of classical music and could solve quadratic equations when he was three. When
he smiles, even I have to catch my breath.
Octavio sits to Pasqual's left, and he stares straight
out at the anonymous mass of us. He's the least affected of the three, as
though he's indifferent to his presence on the stage. I'm surprised he's
advanced this far, but then, the summer king contest is never predictable.
Octavio is smaller, but not small. He rarely smiles and speaks only when the
contest demands it. He isn't particularly beautiful,
though I wouldn't call him plain. He writes, which is an unusual skill for a
moon prince. Normally, they do something flash, like rivet surfing or capoeira
or even just singing. He writes love poems to someone who even now remains
anonymous, despite the efforts of a hundred thousand desperate girls and boys.
Octavio's poems make my heart feel small in my chest. They make me want to cry
and rage at the same time.
These two are brilliant; they are the sort of boys any
waka would die to spend an evening with.
I hate them both.
Gil and I don't care that it's a moon year and none of
these boys will have any real power. Let the king five years from now, the next
sun year, pick a new Queen. We just want our beautiful boy, our true moon
prince. We want Enki more than we've wanted anything before.
Enki leans back in his chair with a bright smile, like
he's almost as giddy as the rest of us to see him onstage. Auntie Isa orates
about the historic nature of our city and our unique system of king elections.
Gil and I don't pay much attention. He's pulled out his holo projector and mine
is on my lap. I've decided to turn them on close to the end of the event, when
Enki is speaking. That way my stunt should get the most attention.
But then Auntie Isa says a name far more interesting
than the endless nattering about first King Alonso and his original selection
of first Queen Odete. "The distinguished ambassador from Tokyo 10,
Ueda-sama, will have the honor of asking our three finalists the first
question."
This prompts a strange mixture of nervous laughter and
frenetic clapping. I remember Auntie Yaha talking about how some people see the
ambassador's visit to the city as a sign that the Aunties might ease our
restrictions on new tech. Tokyo 10 is famous for their nanotech and a new
breakthrough for turning living humans into immortal data streams. I've read
the reports, but the descriptions of Tokyo 10 might as well be a
pre-dislocation fantasy for all I understand them. I flirt with our regulations
for the sake of my projects, but I've never seen anything even approaching the
technology that must seem normal to the ambassador.
But the man who shakes Auntie Isa's hand with a
deferential smile looks strangely normal. No body-mod appendages like wings or
webbed hands or antennae or the dozens of other things I've seen in pictures.
His face has the smooth agelessness of Auntie Isa's, which makes me think he
must be very old. His voice is soft but steady, with barely a trace of an
accent.
"My thanks, Auntie Isa. It is an honor to be
allowed to celebrate such an important cultural moment with all of you. My
question for these three young men is simple. What plans do you have if you
don't win?"
Gil and I glance at each other, surprised and
intrigued. No one has ever asked a question like that before, not even
Sebastião, our top gossip caster. It's rude in a way I can't quite articulate —
only an outsider like Ueda-sama could get away with asking it.
Pasqual answers first. "I want to be king,"
he says. "This city is my city, and you are my people. I can think of no
greater honor than to be your sacrifice."
Gil claps; I roll my eyes. Pasqual is such a
grandstander, with this booming, theatrical voice that would make a statue
shiver. He wields his charisma like a bludgeon, so it doesn't even matter that
he didn't answer the ambassador's real question.
Octavio stays seated, a line between his eyebrows
while he answers slowly and with great care.
"I have thought about it, of course I have,
though my chief desire is the same as Pasqual's. But were I to lose, I
certainly wouldn't regret living out my life — though with far fewer people
watching on, I'm sure." His small, self-deprecating smile makes me warm to
him despite myself. I don't want Octavio to be king, but I imagine he would be
a good friend.
Enki stands for his response. He opens his mouth, but
then closes it without speaking and walks with abrupt grace over to where
Uedasama waits on the side of the stage.
"We haven't met formally," Enki says,
extending his hand. Uedasama accepts the gesture smoothly, which reminds me of
Auntie Yaha. The skills of career diplomats. "It's a good question,"
Enki says, his eyes dancing, "but didn't anyone tell you not to take us
seriously?"
I giggle — high and tight and brief, more to release
tension than express mirth. As usual, Enki walks so close to the edge of
acceptable behavior that his feet bleed. Sometimes I wonder if he could make
the Aunties angry enough to disqualify him from the contest. It hasn't happened
yet, but flirting with the ambassador of the most preeminent tech city in the
world might just cross that line.
But Ueda-sama answers him before Auntie Isa can
intervene. "I think," says the ambassador from a city of immortals,
"that a man proposing to die deserves the respect of that choice."
Enki nods. "By reminding us of the lives we will
abandon?"
Even Ueda-sama winces at the heart of his question,
stripped raw beneath the bemused lash of Enki's tongue. "You need a
reminder?" he says.
Gil squeezes my hand hard enough to hurt, and I
squeeze back.
The smile leaves Enki's eyes, but it finds his mouth.
He buries the long fingers of his left hand deep into dreadlocked hair.
"No," he says. "Sometimes I think about it. I would play peteca,
because I'm not very good right now. I'd dance, of course." He flashes a
smile at the mostly bewildered wakas in the audience, which provokes relieved
laughter. "Nothing special."
"So you've decided it doesn't matter if you lose
that life?"
"Saying good-bye to it was the hardest thing I've
ever done," Enki says. They are standing very close together. "But I
still chose this city," he says, addressing the darkened mass of us,
instead of the ambassador. "And I hope she will choose me."
The cheers and stomping feet shake the floor of the stadium.
Gil turns to me. I can't hear him over the din, but I can read his lips.
"Now?" he asks.
It's earlier than I planned, but I nod impulsively.
"Three, two, one," I say, tapping his arm to the count. On one, we
both switch on our projectors and hold them high above our heads.
I had to use two projectors to program the image
because one wouldn't have been enough to attract attention in such a large
space. But the split image means Gil and I need to hold them at exactly the
right height and distance from each other. From below I can't tell if we've
managed it. My shoulders ache; sweat traces an itchy line down my temple, but
it seems that no one has noticed us at all.
Enki basks in the rapture of his chosen audience. My
grimace turns half smile. But as the noise subsides, Auntie Isa thanks the
ambassador for his question with the barest hint of annoyance. Enki bows
slightly from his hips and walks back to the other finalists.
I bite my lip to distract myself from the fierce burn
in my biceps and shoulder blades.
"Damn it!" I say, loud enough in the
quieting stadium for my neighbors to glare at me. I imagined turning on the
holo-sign to shocked attention and general approbation. I hadn't prepared for
this — what good is public art if no one even notices? Gil glances at me,
probably waiting for a sign that I've had enough.
But then Enki pauses, turns
his head, and squints. "Is that . . ." he says, peering out at us
like he's caught sight of Venus on a clear night.
He's seen it. The familiar
floating hologram of our pyramid city, but with a ghostly, dark handprint at
its heart — a clear echo of Fidel, our last moon year king, who marked Serafina
with his bloody hand. At the top rotate the words The wakas of Palmares Três
want Enki. The bottom of the pyramid glows green with miniature algae vats.
Beneath that, the words This year, our light comes up from the verde.
He laughs and claps his
hands. "I hope so," he says, and sits back down. Auntie Isa ignores
us entirely, focused as she is on restoring order and control to the event. But
why should I care — the only one who matters laughed at my sign and now
everyone must be staring at it, wondering who had the audacity to do such a
thing. I imagine I can hear a few of the camera bots buzz a little closer
overhead. If I'm lucky, this will rate a second- or third-tier gossip cast.
Gil and I grin at each
other in a moment of pure triumph. But I don't want to overstay my welcome, so
we shut off the projectors just as the two security guards finally get around
to asking us to leave.
Sometimes I imagine the end
of the world.
Not this end of the world.
The other one, four hundred years ago.
You know those pictures
they show us on Memorial Day? The thousands upon thousands of tiny white
crosses sticking out of the dirt like daisies. The char pits after the bodies
piled too high to bury, belching clouds of black smoke that spread like oil
above Rio and São Paulo. It's strange for a boy to look at that, no matter how
long ago, and not imagine how it must have been. It must have looked like
Armageddon when the cold came, when the dirty bombs devastated Pernambuco.
Hundreds of millions more died in the nuclear wars and the freezing and the
southern migrations.
I know all that, but it's
not what I imagine.
I imagine I'm a Queen. Odete,
sitting in a bomb shelter somewhere on the
coast of Bahia, in a
country that had once been Brazil, and trying to force a new world from the
screaming mouth of the old one. What wouldn't I do? What wouldn't I create? Who
wouldn't I sacrifice, if it would keep the world from ever dying again?
So I take my lover, my
king, and I put him on a pedestal and I cut him down. A man, like the ones who
ruined the world.
I take from the world I
know: Candomblé, which always respected a woman's power. Catholicism, which
always understood the transformation of sacrifice. And Palmares, that legendary
self-made city the slaves carved themselves in the jungle, proof that a better
world can be built from a bad one.
And so, Palmares Três.
Odete's utopia was even more improbable than my birth, and yet here we both
are. Don't you ever wonder how we came to such a strange place from the way the
world was before?
When the world is
destroyed, someone must remake the world. I think you'd call that art.
Excerpt of The Summer Prince courtesy of Arthur A. Levine Books/Scholastic. Text
copyright 2013 by Alaya Dawn Johnson.
http://www.npr.org/2013/02/15/171812208/exclusive-first-read-the-summer-prince-by-alaya-dawn-johnson?ft=3&f=100876926&sc=nl&cc=bn-20130221
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