Liberty's Daughter by Naomi Kritzer


Liberty's Daughter
Title : Liberty's Daughter
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : -
Language : English
Format Type : Kindle Edition
Number of Pages : 261
Publication : First published November 21, 2023
Awards : Nebula Award Middle Grade and Young Adult Literature (2023), Minnesota Book Award Genre Fiction (2024), Lodestar Award (2024)

Beck Garrison lives on a seastead — an archipelago of constructed platforms and old cruise ships, assembled by libertarian separatists a generation ago. She's grown up comfortable and sheltered, but starts doing odd jobs for pocket money.

To her surprise, she finds that she's the only detective that a debt slave can afford to hire to track down the woman's missing sister. When she tackles this investigation, she learns things about life on the other side of the waterline — not to mention about herself and her father — that she did not expect. And that some people will stop at nothing to keep her from talking about . . .


Liberty's Daughter Reviews


  • Peter Tillman

    This is a good female-perspective remix of a Heinlein juvenile. It's choppy and doesn't always make sense: the book started out as a series of short stories, published at F&SF 2012-2015:
    https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pe.cgi?...
    The book isn't a straight fix-up novel: Kritzer has done quite a bit of rewriting of the original stories, and (as you know, Bob) she's a first-rate writer. I read some of the shorts back in the day, and was looking forward to reading the novel. It's not quite as good as I hoped, but definitely worth reading. Cautiously recommended: my rating is 3.5 stars, and I'm still wobbling, as I type this, whether to round up or down.

    The review here that's closest to my reaction is by my GR friend Tim Hicks:

    https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
    Read his review first!

    And here is the author, making the case for her book over at Scalzi's:

    https://whatever.scalzi.com/2023/11/2...
    Good stuff. Note the Kindle edition is currently $6.

    Also worth reading: the novel's nomination for the 2023 Prometheus Award. Interesting stuff:

    https://www.lfs.org/blog/review-the-p...

  • Diana Green

    I have enjoyed other books by this author, and Liberty's Daughter was no exception. The first half was truly exceptional and I would give it a full five stars. The world building was spot on, as was the plot development. About halfway through, the story changed directions and I felt it became less convincing. I still enjoyed reading it, but the new crisis seemed farfetched, and the main character grew too super-powered in her ability to fix things. I would give the second half of the book three stars. So, on average, my rating is four stars. This rating also fits with the high quality of the writing, combined an unfortunate abundance of typos. The publisher REALLY needs to improve their proofreading. A shame, when the book itself is so good. Wonderful concept, stellar beginning, and overall an engaging read.

  • Littleblackcart

    hmmm. A book that requires a different scoring system than the flat one of "how many stars".

    This is a young adult dystopia adventure novel (almost more a series of connected short stories) mostly taken up with describing the various parts of a society based on anarcho-capitalist tenets (I hate ceding any version of the label anarchist to this group, but they have so far won that jargon battle).

    I was surprised by the take-away at the conclusion (or the concluding chapters), as it was both more actually anarchist and also less simplistic, than I had expected. Kritzer's prose is lean and straight-forward in a way that worked for me. I think she could've done more with all her characters as none of them were particularly complex, but that did make it more of a fun read than it would've been otherwise. And is also why both "young adult" and "adventure" are in the first line here.

  • Beth Cato

    I read this young adult work as part of the Nebula Award/Norton packet. I found it to be a breezy, intense read, genuinely interesting from page one. I think my only issue was that it was clear that different segments were published separately, as the sections still felt somewhat disjointed. A fabulous work, though. I've really enjoyed everything I've read by Kritzer.

  • Teleseparatist

    Lovely, surprisingly warm coming-of-age near-future science-fiction novel about the teen daughter of a libertarian big-shot on a semi-lawless seastead, having adventures and learning to question everything. Honestly, the charm and joy this had was that of a five-star read, I just wish the editing was a little more thorough and the plot and world were more fleshed-out - I feel like there could have, should have been more connective tissue and some obvious but unmentioned or barely acknowledged problems of the seastead could have been brought up in a story of greater length.

  • katayoun Masoodi

    liked this and all these different stories on the seastead though can't say i liked the part where she went to california, especially since it was the end, felt flat and incomplete and beck did not like the strong girl she was at first. it felt like the covid was done, the author had things to do and was bored witht the whole main character and the world though agree that the last chapters were kind of a let down. still the writing was very good, if different stories a bit disjointed and not definitely felt like different short stories and not one book. again good that the stories were short, sad that you couldn't see much of the characters.

  • Mark

    Interesting mash-up of stories set on a libertarian seastead. Actually quite insightful given these were written over the last decade, they really nail the what these places are likely to be like.

  • Meredith

    I really enjoyed this! It is apparently from a series of shorter stories, so there's some repetition between sections and it's a bit episodic, but there are story threads that run through the whole thing as well. I loved the main character and how she learned and approached the challenges she was faced with. Definitely recommend for folks who enjoyed Kritzer's CatNet books.

  • Yev

    Rebecca Garrison, 16 years old, has lived in New Minerva since her father brought her to the seastead when she was 4. The seastead is located 220 nautical miles west of Los Angeles and was founded 49 years ago. It's an assortment of man-made islands, platforms, ships, freighters, and other vessels. Each collection of these is considered their own country with their own set of laws. What they share in common is a libertarian ideology, ranging from literally anything is allowed to minimal statism. Everyone has to buy a stake to become a citizen, otherwise they're a guest worker and probably soon to be literally sold into conditions little better than slavery. There's no public infrastructure or government services almost anywhere. A significant part of the economy works on the barter system, which is where Beck has found her niche as a finder. She trades favors and items and helps out at the miscellany store. This takes her all over the seastead, which eventually leads to her becoming more involved in its darker sides. Everything that happens here may be normal to her, but that doesn't mean it's ethical. She knows the majority of adults are criminals fleeing punishment, especially the wealthy ones, but she has no idea about why the seastead is allowed to continue existing or that there are secrets here that could change the world.

    6 of the stories that make up this novel were serialized in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction from 2012-2015, which is where I read them. The seventh story, the epilogue, has only been published here. I enjoyed them both then and now. I was somewhat disappointed that there's only about an additional 2% in terms of word count added to the first 6 stories. When I did a text comparison I saw the scenes that were added, which surprisingly weren't to better connect the stories together. There wasn't as much reworking of what already existed as I hoped for, as it was mostly word choice and sentence level changes. Two examples are that the seastead's population went from 22,000 to 80,000 and one minor character's name was changed from Kat to Jen. What I had in mind would've made it an easy 5 stars for me, and probably significantly better for others reading it here for the first time. I'm strongly biased towards liking this because it's the sort of near future daily life adventures in a speculative society that I especially enjoy.

    What I found most interesting in reading these stories again was how much the context had changed in only ten years or so. Interest in seasteading seems to have vanished relative to charter cities, the covid pandemic happened and changed how I viewed mass outbreaks in illness and how people react to them. Part of this book probably comes off as much more conspiratorial than it was at the time if only because Kritzer wrote what some of the paranoid and reasonable fears were ahead of their manifestation.

    Rating: 4.5/5

  • Celeste Haehnel

    This is a rather simple, YA story that could essentially be treated as a set of short and interconnected stories. The four stars are because I enjoyed it immensely, not because I thought it was particularly unique or wondrous.

  • Keith

    “Liberty’s Daughter” is the newly released novel by Naomi Kritzer, who is probably best known for her excellent short stories. Many of these have been collected into her noteworthy anthology, “Cat Pictures Please.” She’s also written a duo of young adult books.

    “Liberty’s Daughter” takes the reader to a gritty near future world where libertarians and others have established a sea stead in the Pacific Ocean. This community consists of a number of decommissioned ships, platforms, and other structures all gathered together. These have differing levels of rules of law, from none to few. This loose confederation of inhabited structures was founded by rich individuals who wanted to escape from the heavy hand of governments, and live as they wished. Others come here to escape the law, or to start over where their past doesn’t matter. The only thing that does matter is wealth, which more or less equals power.

    Beck (short for Rebecca) is the titular daughter of the sea stead, she’s lived here with her father since she was four. She’s now 16, and works as a finder. She seeks out items or services that people want or need in the limited environment of the ‘stead. She has just been commissioned to find a person, a sister of a bond-worker who has vanished. This journey leads her into the grim reality of the lower-class laborers who are exploited by some of the more powerful residents of the stead. These workers are beginning to organize, and this is a terrible thing to many in power.

    Overall, I found the novel compelling. It’s an exploration of the darker underside of a libertarian society. Beck seems pivotally involved in the events of a transformative time in the history of her society, and this is a point at which I sometimes was taken slightly out of the story. However, with a little suspension of disbelief, I was able to continue my enjoyment of the novel. The vision of this near-future society isn’t utopian, and tends to the darker aspects of human nature. However, the overall narrative is positive, and Beck’s story turns out well in the end. I’d recommend this novel as a very different and interesting read, that explores a novel setting. Good science fiction explores the “what if” questions in settings that are logical extensions of the ramifications of possibilities. This is exactly that, and it does a good job of exploring its questions.

  • Maryanne

    Not a wasted word which seems to a rare commodity in most books I’ve picked up lately.

  • Firstname Lastname

    So very satisfying

    This is very well written. Foreshadowing done skilfully, extra twist completely unexpected, 3-d characters, believable mid-teen POV. Kritzer always spins a good tale, this one is particularly fine.

  • Penn Hackney

    Bought for $6.35 on 11/19/23 to read for the Second Foundation Group discussion on 4/28/24, after reading Kritzer’s delightful catnet stories, one of which won an the 2020 Edgar Award for best YA novel. Gonna read her first novel, Fires of the Faithful, next.

    Parts:
    1. Missing
    2. High Stakes
    3. Solidarity
    4. Outbreak
    5. Jubilee
    6. Behind the Silicon Curtain
    7. California Dreaming

    Forty-nine years after founding the seasteads. Great world-building: clever, imaginative, and elaborate. Includes political intrigue and sweet-boiled detective genres. Maybe too much, though, with labor activism, a nanotech virus (contagious, of course), pandemic quarantine, and even a suggestion of romance. Plus contemporary issues of the pandemic, like contagion, vaccines, anti-vaxxers,

    Sweet characters and delicious warm humor with some dark themes, like colonialism, debt-slavery, genetic engineering, bio-terrorism / mind control / evil science, and unregulated capitalism. A nice YA vibe withal, as Beck is a smart, plucky, likable 16-year-old, who helps everyone around her.

    So many interesting, surprising, silly, weird things in the world- building of the different seastead communities, including what Beck’s entrepreneurial work is to negotiate for. E.g., for turquoise-blue cashmere sweaters or vanilla-scented bath bubbles or potting soil, p. 68.

    Narrator (Beck) talks to us readers (e.g. “You’re probably wondering” p. 80; “Cholera, in case you’re not familiar with it—“ p. 198) and tells some of her story in letters to her mom, together works as a pretty clever exposition. But if she’s not addressing someone in particular, it’s a bit disconcerting.

    “Beck is an expert at finding people,” Zach said. “And even more an expert at talking them into shit that was not on their to-do list that day.” p. 202. Cf. “Finder” by Suzanne Palmer. Also there’s a Heinlein juvenile vibe of the competent plucky youth learning self-reliance and making ethical decisions correctly, and the Heinleinian thought experiment of what libertarian and quasi-libertarian societies might look like, a la the “rational anarchy” of The Moon is a Harsh Mistress.

    Written contracts and handshake deals.

    Disease causing repetitive conpulsions, cf. Severance (2018), by Ling Ma.

    It’s wonderful how Beck develops independence and the ability to ignore what her parents tell her to do. E.g., “I ignored my mother’s scowl, just as I’d gotten used to ignoring what my father wanted me to do,” p. 196. A Bildungsroman of sorts: Beck learns self-reliance (ch. 7) and how to make her own decisions, take risks, and employ (for the good of others - she starts with an innate altruism that doesn’t need to grow) her connection to dad and the power that comes with that (passim).

    The wealthy and powerful can leave. Cf. “the richer sort of people, especially the nobility and gentry from the west part of the city, thronged out of town with their families and servants in an unusual manner;” ~ Daniel Defoe, A Journal of the Plague Year, p. 950 of my Kindle complete works.

    The breakdown of society in Lib due to cholera reminded my of the Black Plague of 1348 in Tuscany: In this extremity of our city’s suffering and tribulation the venerable authority of laws, human and divine, was abased and all but totally dissolved, for lack of those who should have administered and enforced them, most of whom, like the rest of the citizens, were either dead or sick, or so hard bested for servants that they were unable to execute any office; whereby every man was free to do what was right in his own eyes. ~ Boccaccio, Decameron, proem (p. 26 of my Kindle copy)

    A very literate Zach, p. 209, quoting from Defoe’s Journal of the Plague Year: “[The watchman] continued knocking, and the bellman called out several times, ‘Bring out your dead’; but nobody answered, till the man that drove the cart, being called to other houses, would stay no longer, and drove away.” ~ Daniel Defoe, A Journal of the Plague Year, p. 996 of my Kindle complete works.

    P.S. I love Father Tim’s books, ch. 7: Lord of the Rings, a shelf of books by Ursula K. Le Guin, and The Secret Garden. And this is priceless (and true in my experience): “Feel free to come by and talk anytime. About anything. Empiricists and rationalists are welcome here; I’m a Jesuit, after all.”

    An unfinished feel - these characters and relationships are wonderfully drawn, but they don’t always feel organic:
    > What happens to Janet (ch. 4) and her TV crew?
    > How did Lynn end up on Sal (ch. 14)? Why isn’t she more respectful of Beck, who found her and essentially saved her life?
    > What happens to dad? Why did he give Beck biometric access to Sal? He did leave her access - and boullion - and she still has feelings for him, ch. 15 p. 245. The relationship is complicated, “He’s not *always* awful, you know.” Ch. 8 p. 126.
    > What happens to Thor (how old is he?j and the budding romance? (Cf. Beck’s relief at seeing Thor and his lovely simpatico response, ch. 7 pp. 109-10, with subsequent interactions evincing trust and reliance, not to mention a “date” and youthful anticipation along the way (“I can’t believe you didn’t think this was a romantic destination,” he said. “It’s dimly lit, mysterious, and our parents would never find us down here. What more could you ask for?” ch. 8 p. 132; “Have you ever slept on a concrete floor?” I asked. “It’s really uncomfortable.” “Who said anything about sleep?” ch. 8 p. 139; also p. 126), and ending with their long-distance chat in ch. 15 pp. 243-45.
    > What happens to Zach and the AD rangers?
    > Will Beck come to love California and Thor come to her, or vice versa? This at the end about mom is powerful: “…. fundamentally, Mom wasn’t wrong to be worried, and she wasn’t wrong to be afraid, I just didn’t like the answer being, ‘I did the best I could under the circumstances.’ I wanted to be able to judge her for how she’d failed. ‘The world is really big, Beck,’ she said.” Ch. 15 p. 257. Meaning, life choices - and motives - are complicated, sometimes self-contradictory, with lots of nuance and wrong turns, yet most of us *do* try our best, especially for those we love.

    Despite some roughness at the edges, an easy 4 stars.

  • Valerie Nadal

    Imagine if a teenage Leslie Knope set about trying to improve her community, but her community is a libertarian dystopia, and you have this book. The worldbuilding in Liberty's Daughter is outstanding- Kritzer does a great job of imagining what a society would look like if libertarian philosophy were taken to its logical conclusion (the answer is a much more malicious world than Ron Swanson would approve of), and the sea-stead is such a creative setting. I also really liked the character of Beck.

  • Simon

    Recent Reads: Liberty's Daughter. Naomi Kritzer's seastead novel explores the downside of unregulated living in a libertarian exclave in the Pacific. Teenager Beck Garrison makes a living finding things for people, only to uncover the dark underneath. The ones who built Omelas.

  • Mhd

    [Bookmarks blurb sounds interesting; YA]

  • David

    That this book was inspired by, and a reaction to, Robert A. Heinlein, is patently obvious even if there are no overt call-outs or references. I haven't read anything by Naomi Kritzer before and don't know what her feelings about Heinlein are, but this book could not be more Heinleinesque if it added a few spankings and some Bugs.

    I love Heinlein, skeevy spanking fetish and all. But Liberty's Daughter has the feel of a classic Heinlein juvenile — its protagonist is a smarty, spunky, capable girl whose father "runs" things in a vague, behind-the-scenes kind of way on their seastead home. Beck Garrison is an independent gal just trying to earn some pocket money, like most teenagers, but her part-time job as "finder" of miscellenry leads her to the dark underside of the seastead home where she has spent her entire life.

    Which is where Liberty's Daughter is clearly also a response to some of Heinlein's other books, especially The Moon is a Harsh Mistress. Many of Heinlein's books depicted societies, on the moon or in near-future Earth enclaves, that run on anarcho-libertarian principles. There was a lot of philosophizing, and there was always present the uber-competent Heinleinian Male, a stern, wise, yet loving patriarchal figure, and the equally uber-competent Heinleinian Female, as brilliant and capable as her man but always ready to do the dishes and then throw off her clothes for some proper servicing.

    I'm being a little cheeky, and a little unfair to the old man here. Talking about Heinlein always invites the Great Heinlein Debate. The man has passionate fans and passionate haters, and after reading this book, I honestly don't know which one Naomi Kritzer is. Maybe both.

    The seastead is a collection of separatist anarcho-libertarian communes in the Pacific Ocean, made of floating platforms and spare ships all tied together and turned into a collection of micro-states, not really recognized as governments by the rest of the world, but allowed to exist more or less autonomously. The United States and some other countries have "outreach offices" there, but since the seasteaders exist in international waters, as long as they don't give the U.S. or anyone else a reason to send in the Navy, they are mostly left alone.

    Rebecca Garrison's father is a rich guy who brought her to the 'stead when she was four, after her mother died. We never learn exactly what he does or where his money came from, but he's a Big Deal on the seastead, which means Beck has grown up living a fairly privileged life. Through her eyes, we learn how life in this libertarian utopia works. People can "buy in" with a full stake on the stead and an apartment if they have enough money, but many people arrive as "bond workers" — basically, they sell themselves into indentured servitude, hoping to eventually earn their way to freedom and enough money to buy a stake of their own. Technically, there is no "slavery" on the 'stead, only because countries like the U.S. probably would get involved if their citizens were literally being enslaved. But as we (and Beck) learn, "technically" has a lot of wiggle room. While conditions on the 'stead have clearly become normalized for her, even she is shocked to discover that where the "laws" are basically that anything you can get away with is legal, people can and will get away with a lot.

    After trying to find a bond worker who disappeared, Beck is recruited to help a producer who's arrived from Hollywood to run a reality show on the 'stead. This leads to Beck discovering even more of the stead's dark side, and running into direct opposition with her father, who wants to maintain the status quo and doesn't want his daughter stirring up trouble. Unfortunately, he learns that when you raise a Heinleinian juvenile on an anarcho-libertarian commune, you get an independent-minded troublemaker.

    Her father, Paul Garrison, is an archetypal Heinleinian Male: brilliant, wealthy, and in Kritzer's version, completely amoral. The relationship between Beck and her father seems awkward and true to what growing up with this kind of a father would be: he appears to feel some affection for her, but it's hard to tell whether his "love" extends beyond seeing her as an extension of himself, and he doesn't take it well when his progeny turns defiant. He starts out just being kind of an aloof, authoritarian d-bag, but Beck learns more and more about the dark side of her father, and the seastead where they live. Beck, in turn, seems a pretty normal teenage girl, but whether with her father or with her boyfriend, she seems almost emotionally stunted and we never get any deep insights into how she feels about them.

    There was a lot to like in Liberty's Daughter, whether you love Heinlein or hate him (or have never read him). As a near-future SF novel, it's barely science fiction, and presents teens doing things in an almost-today setting. Beck is smart and likeable, and gets her way by being clever and having a lot of moxy, and while sometimes her ability to get away with things seemed a little too easy, she does run up against the limits of being a teenage girl in a world run by adults. As social commentary, it's both a critique of the Heinleinian archetype of competence and individualism, and of libertarianism.

    There were also things that annoyed me. Beck is a bit flat as a character, and the ending — really, the last third of the book — seemed to be a series of escalating consequences and abrupt transitions that Beck continues to react to in a rather muted way. The end just sort of trails off, though in a way that would certainly allow for a sequel.

    I also have to say that I was appalled by the editing. I've heard that publishers have been cheaping out on editing lately, and this showed it; I spotted typos and grammatical errors every few pages. Not entirely fair to judge a book by its editing, but I do, dammit, so this 3.5 star book gets knocked down to 3 stars for not having had competent proofreading.

  • Bonnie McDaniel

    This is both a near-future thriller and a commentary on the politics of today, particularly an examination of and tearing apart the philosophy of libertarianism. The author sets up her world and follows through the implications to the end, and shows that a libertarian society is not one most people would like to live in.

    Rebecca Garrison, or Beck, is sixteen years old and living on the "seastead," a somewhat ramshackle cobbled-together outpost of retired cruise ships/aircraft carriers/cargo haulers/artificial islands built and maintained by people who want to live away from the rules and taxes of most countries (and/or run away from the charges levied by said countries after breaking their laws). Since there is no public school system (or public anything, including basic services and health care--everything is paid for through fees, subscriptions and selling one's self into debt slavery), Beck has a job as a "Finder." That means she is hired to find the odd little luxuries not readily available on a isolated seastead. During her search for a pair of shoes, she is asked to discover what happened to one woman's sister, and this search and what Beck finds out not only upends seastead society but pretty much brings it down at the end.

    This book is a bit depressing though, because even though the book's ending is hopeful, I cannot believe how supposedly intelligent people can be caught up in such a toxic idea as libertarianism. In this future, anyone can come to the seastead, but only those who have money really thrive there, creating a rigid system of haves and have-nots. The rich buy a stake to get in, and the poor are "bonded," having to work off their debt to live there. If a bonded person gets sick, their bond can be sold (without the person's consent) to anyone willing to pay for their treatment. (Obviously if you don't have money and no one will buy your bond, you just die, which is the natural outcome for a society that doesn't believe in any form of taxation for the public good.) This is what happened to the woman Beck is looking for: she fell ill and needed a kidney regeneration, and her bond was sold to a "skin farm," which uses dangerous caustic methods to create brand-new young skin for (again) rich people who can pay for it. This woman, Lynn Miller, ended up in literal debt slavery, chained to her station in the skin farm until Beck shows up to free her.

    Our protagonist, Beck Garrison, is a well-written and interesting character. She's a sensible, down-to-earth teenager who was brought to the seastead by her father at the age of four (who is, as we find out, a domestic abuser/mob boss who tried to kill her mother and kidnapped her child, fleeing to the seastead with Beck). She's smart, practical, stubborn and persistent, and her great strength in this story is knowing how the seastead works and how its inhabitants think. This enables her not only to find and free Lynn, but when she gets involved with a "Survivor"-type reality show filming on the seastead, to find participants for the show who are secret union organizers, thus setting in motion the events that bring the seastead's leaders down.

    This storyline pits the seastead's rich and ruthless bosses against the ordinary people who actually make it run, who want to live and work there without selling themselves into debt slavery. The bosses go so far to engineer a tailor-made "worker bee" nanotech virus that will force the bonded people to cooperate and be happy in their work, but it backfires into a plague that sweeps the entire seastead (and also sets off a cholera outbreak on one of the ships, the community of Lib, which is another result of having no taxation or regulatory apparatus for public safety). Beck helps solve this problem as well, working with one of the seastead's mercenary companies to get aid to Lib and discover the source of the "worker bee" plague.

    Beck is able to do all this because as the daughter of Paul Garrison, one of the seastead's higher-up movers and shakers, she has a great deal of privilege. The story doesn't shy away from that, but in this case Beck has enough of a conscience to use her privilege for good. (It's also interesting, and telling, that most of the seastead's inhabitants are white. There's not a white-supremacy plot thread as such, but the uncomfortable implications are there, if a bit under-explored.) At the story's end, with most of the rich bondholders fleeing, Beck voids the bonded people's contracts and turns over the running and ownership of the seastead to them. She also reunites with her mother, who has come to the seastead aboard the aid ship, and goes to California to live with her. (Her father, the union-busting sociopath who was involved in the tailoring of the worker bee virus, escapes at the end for parts unknown, and good riddance.) Beck is going to live on the mainland at least until she turns eighteen, but she still views the seastead as her home (and has a bit of a budding romance with a boy there as well) and intends to return later on.

    This is an interesting story because of Beck and her world, and the implications thereof. I have heard libertarianism defined as the "ultimate ode to selfishness," and this book shows that is pretty much the case. If you don't like political-tinged SF, you won't like this, but I think it has some cogent commentary on certain elements of our world today.

  • Holly

    Really enjoyed this until the last 10%. Ending was strange and unconvincing.

  • Sarah

    I have slightly mixed feelings about this book. I absolutely love Naomi Kritzer and this is a very Naomi Kritzer book (complimentary). Her prose is on point as always, there are some wonderful elements, and overall I had a great time reading it. But I also found it a bit frustrating, because with just a little tweaking I think this could have been truly phenomenal instead of solidly good.

    It's a great setup with excellent worldbuilding. I loved the idea of the sea steaders and the exploration of the types of social issues that would arise. As always, Kritzer's ability to write thoughtfully about community is on full display. And the lead character is *fantastic* - she's like a combination of Veronica Mars and Kritzer's "highly competent practical person" narrative voice; I'd read more stories featuring her in a heartbeat. Some sections of this book were really wonderful, especially in the first half.

    On the less successful side, this novel is partially based on several previously published short stories, and for me the "seams" between the original stories and the newer material were visible and sometimes quite jarring. In some cases it was just thinking that the narrative had suddenly lost focus, or noticing a slightly awkward transition from one episodic storyline to another, which I didn't mind. But a few times it was really noticeable, with strange references to the setting and earlier events that felt repetitive and made me think I had likely stumbled into one of the prior published stories. I think this book would have been stronger if those transitions had been smoothed out more. This also factored into the pacing not feeling quite right. And unfortunately I also thought the ending was quite weak. This might be because it didn't seem to build on or arise naturally from the earlier events of the book.

    There were also a truly astonishing number of weird typos. This isn't Kritzer's fault, obviously, but it was very distracting. While I do usually notice typos, they rarely bother me. In this case, though, they were so widespread that I started wondering if they were intentional, and meant to reflect some type of language evolution within the sea steader culture. But no, they were just annoying typos.

    I think Kritzer's editors really let her down on this one! I still liked it a lot, but with a stronger editorial pass I think this could have been a 5 star book. I had a great time, though, and I'd be thrilled to read more stories featuring this character. My initial rating was 3.75 stars, but I'm bumping it up to 4 for the Kritzer of it all, and because I think I'm grading on an especially harsh curve, because I'm such a fan of hers.

    r/Fantasy Bingo Squares: Under the Surface, Indie Publisher, maybe Survival

  • Tanya

    When someone's locked away for doing the right thing, that makes them a prisoner of conscience. Not merely a grounded teenager. [p. 62]

    Beck Garrison lives on a seastead off the west coast of the USA: her father is an influential member of the community, and Beck's mother died in a car crash before they left California. Beck is sixteen and earns pocket money by working as a seeker: she takes requests for things that people want, and sources them from other inhabitants of the seastead. One day, trying to locate a pair of sparkly sandals, size eight, she's asked instead to discover what happened to a bond worker's missing sister. Beck's investigations bring her into conflict with the leaders of the seastead, and -- not quite coincidentally -- into the surreal and influential world of reality TV. She finds much more than she set out to find, and is instrumental in instigating sweeping changes that affect every inhabitant (bonded worker, guest worker or stakeholder) of the seastead.

    Beck is a tough-minded and courageous narrator, with considerable chutzpah (at least in part because of her father's status) and determination. Kritzer shows us Beck exploring the hidden underside of the libertarian seastead, and discovering some uncomfortable truths about the privilege which she has enjoyed since childhood. The seastead -- actually six 'nations', assembled from a motley collection of cruise ships, artifical islands and oil rigs -- is an experiment in utopian living, with an ambiguous relationship to the USA, from where many of the inhabitants have migrated. The draconian laws of the US contrast with the lawlessness of the seastead, and especially of Liberty, a nation known for having no law at all.

    I greatly enjoyed
    Catfishing on CatNet, so had high hopes of this novel: I was not disappointed. Though the setting was, in some ways, comparable to
    Brightly Burning, the world-building here felt more solid, and the social aspects more foregrounded than the romance.

    Shortlisted for the Lodestar Award for Best YA Book, 2024: read as part of the Hugo Voters' Pack.


  • Norman Cook

    2024 Lodestar Award finalist for Best YA Book
    2024 Andre Norton Nebula Award finalist for Middle Grade and Young Adult Fiction

    This is a fix-up novel collecting six short stories/novelettes published from 2012 to 2015 in The Magazine of Science Fiction and Fantasy plus a new story to close the book. There may be some additional bridging material that is new, as well. As such, I would think it would have been more appropriate to put this in the Best Series category. Nevertheless, it's an excellent book that deserves recognition. Because it's a fix-up, some of the action is a bit disjointed, but Kritzer does a good job of smoothing out the rough spots.

    The book introduces us to the savvy and spunky 16-year-old Beck Garrison who lives with her father on a floating city a few hours west of California. This seastead was started by some libertarians and has grown to be a haven for disenfranchised and often criminal people. Beck has a part-time job as a scrounger--finding objects for her clients. When she is asked to find a missing person, Beck discovers a dark underbelly to the seastead that her father is somehow involved with. At the same time, her mother (who her father told her was dead) manages to make contact with her from California, further exacerbating Beck's fragile relationship with her father.

    There's some interesting commentary along the way. At one point there's a medical emergency that is solvable with a new vaccine, but there is a schism of those who accept the vaccine and those who believe it's a conspiracy. What's remarkable is that this was written years before the covid vaccine division of opinions, yet is so close to reality. The book also touches on topics ranging from human trafficking to spousal abuse, but manages to stay upbeat and enjoyable. The book ends on a hopeful note, but with a number of loose ends, so I expect there will be a sequel at some point.

    One final note: I caught a couple of spelling errors, so the proofreading for this book wasn't as good as it could have been.

  • Kim Aippersbach

    Liberty's Daughter is a plausible near-future scenario: what if a bunch of libertarians decided to hook some sea-platforms and old cruise ships together to create a sea-stead in international waters? (It's plausible because people have already tried to do it!) I love that Kritzer is able to envision all the nitty-gritty logistics of how such a living arrangement would work. Limited availability of just about everything, for example, leading to our MC's part-time job: finding very specific items for people and negotiating trades. Really great world-building here.

    Kritzer is also cognizant of all the unpleasant maintenance jobs that someone is going to have to do, and her story hinges on the debt-slavery that is a sadly plausible solution. Beck Garrison is a privileged teenager because of her father's position, and until she's asked to help find someone's missing sister, she is naive about her narrow little world. But when she discovers nefarious dealings, she plows ahead determinedly to investigate the literal and figurative underbelly of the sea-stead.

    Everything about this book is just so interesting. The fast-paced plot pinballs through all sections of the unique setting and society, exploring a raft (get it?) of physical, political and social implications. Kritzer's critique is funny, nuanced and ultimately hopeful. Yes, people can be greedy and selfish and cruel, but they can also pull together and care for each other and stand up for each other. And human ingenuity can solve as many problems as it creates!

    Beck might be a bit too confident and capable to be believable, but it sure is fun watching her bulldoze her way through greed, corruption and incompetence. She has some genuine dilemmas; her character growth isn't huge but it's satisfying. The bad guys aren't flatly evil, either.

    Thoroughly enjoyable, and I look forward to seeing what aspect of society Krizter will choose to poke at next!

    cross-posted on my blog,
    https://kaippersbach.blogspot.com/202...

  • Pedro L. Fragoso

    “There’s so much sf about “competent men” running their families with entrepreneurial zeal, clarity of vision and a firm confident hand. But there’s precious little fiction about how much being raised by a Heinlein dad would suuuck. But it would, and in Naomi Kritzer’s Liberty’s Daughter, we get a peek inside the nightmare“ (...)

    So Cory Doctorow begins his praising review of this book in his blog, and is it possible to be so utterly wrong?

    For starters, Beck Garrison is an awesome teenager, Inteligent, resourceful, huh, com-pe-tent... so, for all his shortcomings, her father, who also clearly doesn't fit, in any form or shape, Heinlein's vision of a "competent man", contrary to Doctorow's ascertion, in that most important regard, at least, didn't do a half-assed job.

    And since Heinlein got, even if equivocally, linked to this novel, I'll make a Heinlein connection that actually makes sense: Let me assure you that if you enjoyed his juveniles, here's an extremely rare manifestation of an amazingly well conceived contemporary science-fiction teenage adventure that works perfectly as a homage to those nine or ten fantastic books from the fifties.

    And if we must indeed refer Heinlein at all regarding this book, let us mention that the soul of this novel, is the theme of human endurance and solidarity and how the worst circumstances actually bring the best in people, contrary to popular belief. (And also, free-reign capitalism really stinks and sucks.) It's a fascinating theme, developed frequently by Doctorow, specifically in Walkaway, The Canadian Miracle and The Lost Cause, and by Kritzer, both in this book, and her heartening novelette “The Year Without Sunshine”. Of course, the seminal text on this is Heinlein's “In This I Belief“.

    On another note, this novel also recalled Jorge Amado's imortal phrase “Because the revolution is a homeland and a family.“ ("Captains of the Sands" was also about young fellows, maybe that was the reason.)

  • Allison

    I was really enjoying this book and its look at what might happen if libertarian extremists decided to build their own community out in the Pacific Ocean on a bunch of interconnected sea platforms and retired cruise ships and run it with as few laws as possible--a true Wild West of every person for themselves and literally everything is legal (if you can get away with it, since murder-as-revenge is also totally allowed). I liked her musings on what that would actually look like in practical terms and the corruption that would quickly set in since only the wealthy would really get a voice.

    I also want to point out that most libertarians with more than half a brain stem don't want to live in a situation like this with no regulation at all. They tend to go with the "my rights end where your rights begin" kind of philosophy--so you can have laws against killing other people since they have just as much right to live as you do. They just feel the government oversteps too much in regulating things they shouldn't meddle in.

  • Marjorie Ingall

    GAAAAAAH Naomi Kritzer is so imaginative and her world-building is so great but it's never at the expense of character or dialogue or writing on a pure delicious sentence level. (The rareness of this is why I don't read all that much scifi or fantasy, and don't @ me; I don't mean YOUR favorite writer; they're AWESOME.) I just WOLF DOWN everything this woman writes. Great for teenagers, great for adults who want a suspenseful, stakes-y, immersive read that isn't too scary or upsetting.

    It's about a self-sufficient and delightful teenage girl who lives on a connected flotilla of old cruise ships populated by libertarian separatists. She works as a sort of finder of things (cute sandals in a size 8, various cooking ingredients ... but then she winds up investigating a BIG MYSTERY that turns into a takedown of libertarian dickwads and power-hungry fuckbags. I enjoyed it IMMENSELY. (There's a little bit of romance that's kinda whatever, but it had no impact on my enjoyment.)

    Also, if you watch Survivor, this will SO BE YOUR JAM.

    But not in an upsetting Squid Game kinda way. I couldn't finish Squid Game.

    Many people in this story turn out to be mensch-y, and recognize our fundamental interconnectedness, and take personal risks to help others. This is a world in which a lot of people really want to do right, even when people in power make things shitty and are either stupidly venal or actively trying to make people turn on each other. It's a rousing cheer for organized labor!

    It stands alone but I really, really want a sequel.

    Please?

  • K. Lincoln

    4.5 stars, actually.

    We enter the story with teenager Beck Garrison as she wanders around different seasteads (think giant floating man-made islands comprised of retired freighters and yachts, etc) anchored off the California cost looking for things. She finds things. Usually she finds things by going down into the belowdecks to ask the bond workers (indentured) what they brought from the mainland and then finding other things for them for trade.

    As we enter the story, Beck is looking for strappy sandals, and in trade, she agrees to find out where the bonded sister (whose contract was bought) ended up.

    She is drawn deeper and deeper in the dark side of the unregulated, low-government seasteads, and into a mystery surrounding her father's work. As she gets into danger, Beck excels at negotiating dangerous situations by basically giving folks what they want (or making it impossible for them to retaliate).

    She picks up another teen friend, a gruff mercenary, and gains the respect of various adults.

    What is fascinating here is not only Beck's ability to negotiate, but also the thought experiment of what true unregulation might look like in the modern world. Let's just say, I'm not in a hurry to go join a seastead anytime soon and am super-grateful for the rules and regulations that attempt to keep water clean, employment safe, and outlawing basic slavery.

    Cool near-future sci fi shedding light on current political trends.

  • Dan Trefethen

    This is about half social experiment, half biological thriller. Beck, our 16-year-old narrator, is the daughter of one of the powerful men on the seastead located 230 nautical miles off the California coast (so it's in international waters). There are half a dozen separate parts of the seastead, each with its different rules, from the libertarian Lib to the unconnected-to-the-others Sal, where there are mysterious labs.

    With a 16-year-old narrator who is in the custody of her domineering father, this could be read as a YA book although its not being marketed that way. But it follows the arc of a young person who exerts her independence and agency where she never did before, to foil nefarious plans of the adults.

    This is a fast-paced book that nevertheless has interesting social elements on how people build community in the absence of an overweening government. It deals with issues of security and protection, where the social safety net is not really existent. It's quite well done.

    My only real objection is that the bad guys tend to be manipulative, abusive and possibly murderous fathers. This also occurred in Kritzer's previous book “Catfishing on Catnet”, which was more obviously YA but had similar perils for youngsters. I know horrible and abusive fathers are out there, but it would be nice to see a counterpoint in a loving and supportive father who is believable.

  • Andrewcharles420

    A teenage girl lives on a 'libertarian utopia' seastead with her overbearing father as the colony goes through some dramatic events.

    The book is probably aimed at a young adult audience, but reminds me more of a Heinlein style book than modern YA. Funny and clever, with well-thought out consequences to the presented scenarios. Perhaps a bit too neat (clearly linked causes and effects, linear event story), but that also lends to my idea that it's aimed toward a younger audience. I think it did a good job illustrating different perspectives and motives of the characters--especially the girl and her parents. I would love to see how this girl's perspective evolves as she gains experience--she seems to like the world of the seastead, but sees its shortcomings and doesn't know much about life outside.

    I follow the author on social media and have loved some of her short stories--I will probably read from her again. Recommended as quick, light scifi. Only negative was several sentences that appeared to be missing words... it wasn't common enough for me to pick it up as a seasteader brogue, so I took them as typos in the (purchased!) epub file.