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Reviewed by:
  • Blood Like Magic by Liselle Sambury
  • Natalie Berglind
Sambury, Liselle Blood Like Magic. McElderry,
2021 [496 p]
Trade ed. ISBN 9781534465282 $19.99
E-book ed. ISBN 9781534465305 $10.99
Reviewed from digital galleys R Gr. 9-12

It's 2049 in Toronto, and sixteen-year-old Voya is about to go through her Calling, the trial that will determine whether she will have magic like the rest of her witch family. She might fail, though, since she's directed to destroy her unknown first love, but if she doesn't do it, her entire family will lose magic and future generations will be magicless. Billion-dollar tech company NuGene offers a solution with a beta matching program, and she's matched with handsome trans NuGene intern and sponsor son Luc, who seemingly wants nothing to do with her; Voya's task [End Page 436] will only get harder as the two become closer. Sambury's near-future Toronto is an interesting mix of cultural progressivity and capitalist nightmare, with NuGene's high-tech modding and genetic sequencing services only available to the rich and a "sponsor" system where CEOs groom kids from "so-called 'disadvantaged' countries" to become heirs, but Voya's Black family faces less discrimination than they would in the present day. The technology is additionally thought-provoking, with a rating system for everyone's profiles to determine approachability, and the two prominent trans characters have new tech for transitioning per their preferences but also new battles to fight. It's impossible not to root for Voya, who loves cooking Trinidadian recipes and always looks out for her big, often dysfunctional family, as she uncovers conspiracies in the witch community. Readers will certainly be holding out until the last page to see if Voya and her complex, nuanced family get their much-deserved happiness.

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