cover image Only Ever Yours

Only Ever Yours

Louise O’Neill. Quercus (Hachette, dist.), $16.99 (398p) ISBN 978-1-62365-454-2

In the dystopian society of Irish author O’Neill’s harrowing debut, freida is a 16-year-old “eve,” manufactured by genetic engineers and raised to serve men. The eves (whose individual names are never capitalized in the book, unlike those of men) spend 16 years learning how to avoid “Unacceptable Emotions”—such as anger—and to scrupulously maintain their appearance, all in the hopes of catching the eye of one of 10 Inheritants, “the very men for whom [they] were created.” O’Neill’s novel spans the months leading up to the ceremony when freida and her fellow eves will be divided into three groups: companions (akin to wives), concubines, and chastities. Competition, cruelty, and self-critique thrive at freida’s school (“We may be perfectly designed, but really our eyes are too close together and our thighs are too big”), yet she can’t quite stamp out her skepticism toward the system and her sympathy for herself, her peers, and especially her best friend, isabel. Terrifying and heartbreaking, O’Neill’s story reads like an heir to Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and M.T. Anderson’s Feed, and, like those books, it’s sure to be discussed for years to come. Ages 13–up. (May)