published by Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, 2010
336 pages
approximate age level: 12+
National Book Award finalist
Printz Award Winner, 2011
There are a lot of things that Nailer doesn't know: how old he is, if he's going to get enough to eat, when he's going to lose his job, if his father is going to drink and hit him again when Nailer finally makes it home to his shanty house after another grueling day. Nailer's just a normal kid but was unlucky enough to be born in a slum on the Gulf Coast in the not too distant future, so instead of going to school or doing chores, he struggles to survive as a member of a light crew, a group of kids like him that work long hours disassembling old, rusty oil takers and taking what valuable parts are left, like copper wiring. It's a rough life -- Nailer barely gets paid and will soon be forced out of his job, and left with virtually no other work options, when he grows too big to crawl through the tiny ship ducts. His only hope is for a Lucky Strike, or a windfall so good it will lift him out of his miserable life forever. Then one day he miraculously finds a giant Lucky Strike -- a wrecked clipper ship off the coast that's full of valuable treasure. But there is one problem -- the owner of the ship, a young girl, is trapped on board but still alive. She promises Nailer riches beyond anything he has ever imagined if he will only help her. But is she lying? Nailer must decide if simply a life worth living is worth killing for or if this mysterious girl really can take him farther than he has dared to dream.
Ship Breaker is a novel that undulates, mirroring the ocean, an important and ubiquitous part of the setting. Parts are full of action and and move as quickly as a hurricane, then things slow down and Bacigalupi focuses on the characters who are revealed to us one layer at a time until the climax, which is as much about a finale to the drama as a revelation of what intentions and desires many characters have been harboring inside themselves. Nailer is a plucky protagonist with shades of Oliver Twist whom the reader can't help but root for despite seemingly enormous odds. A collection of other characters, such as Nailer's friend Pima, her mother Sadna, and even, eventually, the mysterious girl from the clipper, are multifaceted, surviving by their own unique moral compasses that are neither commendable or detestable, but understandable given their lives and circumstances. The dystopian setting is described in a detailed and believable manner and is a persuasive enough future to be rather unsettling. Even with its dark moments, such as more than a few violent and unnatural deaths, Ship Breaker is an enjoyable adventure that will leave readers satisfied and hopeful. Though Ship Breaker is Bacigalupi's only YA novel, readers may also enjoy his first work, The Windup Girl.
Read-alike suggestions:
The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi
Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld
Boneshaker by Cherie Priest
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