Miss Archer
'Gothic drama meets a dystopian thriller with jaw-dropping twists . as wise as it is addictive' - Maria Semple, NY Times Bestselling author of Whereâd You Go, Bernadette and This Time It Will Be Different
Growing up in the Squares, Dre Archer was always told human history was over. Until the day she is plucked her from all she knows, and recruited as governess to an enigmatic five-year-old boy. Albie is rash, emotionally obtuse, and possibly a genius. He also believes the year is 1884âtwo centuries before Dre was born. Everyone working at his familyâs grand Victorian manor strives to maintain the illusion, keeping the modern world safely outside their doors. Dre is expected to follow along and not ask questions.
At first, Dre works hard to embody her role as âMiss Archerâ, with comportment lessons and corsets. But somewhere along the way, the performance begins to feel realâas does her bond with this singular boy. Slowly she is overwhelmed by questions: Why the weird adherence to the 19th century, when itâs the dawn of the 22nd? Why has she never met Albieâs elusive parents? Who are her shadowy employers? And what is her job, really?
In her mounting determination to unlock these mysteries, Dre finds herself flouting the draconian rules of the house. As a series of Russian doll-like revelations brings her closer to the truth, Dre must go to dangerous lengths to protect her young charge, who she has, without quite meaning to, come to love as her own.
Never Let Me Go meets Rebecca in an audaciously original and propulsive debut that deftly explores our yearning for the analogue world as we tumble into the future, and asks what it truly means to be human.
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'Gothic drama meets a dystopian thriller with jaw-dropping twists . as wise as it is addictive' - Maria Semple, NY Times Bestselling author of Whereâd You Go, Bernadette and This Time It Will Be Different
Growing up in the Squares, Dre Archer was always told human history was over. Until the day she is plucked her from all she knows, and recruited as governess to an enigmatic five-year-old boy. Albie is rash, emotionally obtuse, and possibly a genius. He also believes the year is 1884âtwo centuries before Dre was born. Everyone working at his familyâs grand Victorian manor strives to maintain the illusion, keeping the modern world safely outside their doors. Dre is expected to follow along and not ask questions.
At first, Dre works hard to embody her role as âMiss Archerâ, with comportment lessons and corsets. But somewhere along the way, the performance begins to feel realâas does her bond with this singular boy. Slowly she is overwhelmed by questions: Why the weird adherence to the 19th century, when itâs the dawn of the 22nd? Why has she never met Albieâs elusive parents? Who are her shadowy employers? And what is her job, really?
In her mounting determination to unlock these mysteries, Dre finds herself flouting the draconian rules of the house. As a series of Russian doll-like revelations brings her closer to the truth, Dre must go to dangerous lengths to protect her young charge, who she has, without quite meaning to, come to love as her own.
Never Let Me Go meets Rebecca in an audaciously original and propulsive debut that deftly explores our yearning for the analogue world as we tumble into the future, and asks what it truly means to be human.











