Art Thieves

Andrea L Rogers

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Book cover for Art Thieves
Image for variant 9781646147526
Book cover for Art Thieves
Image for variant 9781646147526

Art Thieves

Art Thieves

Andrea L Rogers

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Description

Nnedi Okorafor meets Angeline Boulley in this gripping story of hope (and time travel!) amid climate collapse

BEST OF THE YEAR: Shelf Awareness * Cooperative Children's Book Center

TO: Angel Wilson (LawAngel@IBLO.gov)

FROM: Stevie Henry (shenry@gmail.com)

Thanks for coming to see me; but by the time you read this, it will be too late. No one will have started to panic, yet; but in less than two months nothing will be the same. What came first, The Chicken or the Egg Flu? I wish it mattered. But let's just say, maybe go back to wearing a mask, bathing in sanitizer, and avoid birds and eggs for a bit...

I did not kill my brother. I did quite the opposite, really.

It's the year 2052. Stevie Henry is a Cherokee girl working at a museum in Texas, trying to save up enough money to go to college. The world around her is in a cycle of drought and superstorms, ice and fire ... but people get by. However, it's about to get a whole lot worse.

When a mysterious boy shows up at Stevie's museum saying that he's from the future--and telling her what is to come--she refuses to believe him. But soon she will have no choice.

From the author of the Walter Award-winning Man Made Monsters comes a YA novel that conjures our futures in startling life--the ones that we are headed toward, and the ones we can still work toward.

P R A I S E

"The Art Thieves is a book that is both exciting to read and deeply thoughtful about our reality as well as the larger literary landscape of post-apocalyptic fiction. I couldn't put it down, and as soon as I finished reading, I wanted to find something else like it. I even found myself hoping that Rogers might be working on a series. The Art Thieves is reminiscent of Octavia Butler's Parable of the Sower and is in conversation with Afrofuturism more broadly."

--Southern Review of Books

ā˜… "Rogers employs smart and empathetic prose to present a realistically rendered science fiction tale that is at once adrenaline-pumping and emotionally moving. In this gripping adventure, Rogers considers the future of Indigenous heritage via an indomitable protagonist who, alongside a plethora of memorably realized characters, navigates tough issues relating to death, familial turmoil, exploitation, and climate collapse."

--Publishers Weekly (starred)

ā˜… "A stirring story about choosing to create a new future when disaster seems inevitable. Rogers's sophomore YA novel skillfully discusses the current affairs, pop culture, and climate-change related extreme weather events of the future and powerfully relates them to historical and contemporary legacies of racism and oppression . . . Award-winning author Andrea L. Rogers paints a stunning picture of what it means to hope for a better future and the strength it might take to make that future real."

--Shelf-Awareness (starred)

"Sharp social commentary folded into an all-too-believable dystopian setting."

--Kirkus Reviews

From the author of the Walter Award-winning Man Made Monsters comes a YA novel that conjures our futures in startling life - the ones that we are headed towards, and the ones we can still work towards.

P R A I S E

""""The Art Thieves is a book that is both exciting to read and deeply thoughtful about our reality as well as the larger literary landscape of post-apocalyptic fiction. I couldn't put it down, and as soon as I finished reading, I wanted to find something else like it. I even found myself hoping that Rogers might be working on a series. The Art Thieves is reminiscent of Octavia Butler's Parable of the Sower and is in conversation with Afrofuturism more broadly.""""

-- Southern Review of Books

ā˜… "Rogers employs smart and empathetic prose to present a realistically rendered science fiction tale that is at once adrenaline-pumping and emotionally moving. In this gripping adventure, Rogers considers the future of Indigenous heritage via an indomitable protagonist who, alongside a plethora of memorably realized characters, navigates tough issues relating to death, familial turmoil, exploitation, and climate collapse."

-- Publishers Weekly (starred)

ā˜… "A stirring story about choosing to create a new future when disaster seems inevitable Rogers's sophomore YA novel skillfully discusses the current affairs, pop culture, and climate-change related extreme weather events of the future and powerfully relates them to historical and contemporary legacies of racism and oppression.... Award-winning author Andrea L. Rogers paints a stunning picture of what it means to hope for a better future and the strength it might take to make that future real."

-- Shelf-Awareness (starred)

"Sharp social commentary folded into an all-too-believable dystopian setting."

--Kirkus""

About the Author

Andrea L. Rogers is a citizen of the Cherokee Nation. She grew up in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and graduated with an MFA from the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe. Man Made Monsters, Andrea's YA collection of horror stories, received six starred reviews and won the Walter Award; her YA novel The Art Thieves was named best of the year by the Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, Shelf Awareness, and American Indians in Children's Literature, among others. Chooch Helped, her picture book illustrated by Rebecca Lee Kunz, was awarded the Caldecott Medal. Andrea lives in Fayetteville, Arkansas.

Publishing Information

Publisher: Lantern Paperbacks
Pub date: 2026-10-13
Length: 192 pages

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