In Vetrano’s debut SF novel, a legendary Tudor queen is transported to 21st-century America to save the country—and the world—from certain ruin.
It’s 2027, and with a presidential election looming, Dakota Wynfred, the billionaire CEO of a cutting-edge cybersecurity company, feels compelled do something radical to save America’s crumbling democracy. With the incumbent President Vlakas in the White House—whom Wynfred, the child of committed social activists, describes as “a xenophobic misogynist racist anti-science whackadoodle”—it seems possible that the country won’t survive another four years of chaos. Partnering with some of the most brilliant minds in the world, Wynfred discovers a way to travel back and forth in time. The group’s plan is as ambitious as it is unlikely: to go back to Tudor England with a small team of scholars and period experts and persuade Queen Elizabeth I, who ruled England, Ireland, and Wales from 1558 to her death in 1603, to run for president of the United States in 2028. Although the premise is wildly audacious, Vetrano handles all the details with intelligence and insight, from fixing the queen’s blackened teeth to educating her on 21st-century politics and culture. Straight, white Wynfred’s diverse circle of friends—which includes a gay man and a Black woman—offers up additional learning opportunities for the queen. Humorous moments abound as the monarch, in 21st-century Massachusetts, discovers toasters, Nike running shoes, weekly microdermabrasion treatments, and The Bachelorette. However, the book’s obvious thematic power comes from its portrayal of a looming dystopia in which the landscape of America is radically changed by policy-backed bigotry, a lack of environmental protections, book banning, and other actions engineered by the Vlakas administration. Although this story’s conclusion could have had much more impact, the author’s decision to end the story where she does will leave readers deeply contemplative.
A fearless and laser-focused novel of the future that will entertain and trouble readers, by turns.