![]() Mari has a “spirit twin” of a jaguar, who can help to protect her. Abbie ends up deciding to break out two particular inks with the help of her boyfriend, John. Supposedly it’s meant to house sick immigrants, but of course that’s just an excuse to lock people up. There people are fitted with GPS trackers and held against their will. Abbie is a young woman who’s been in trouble with the law, and has to do community service hours at her mother’s “inkatorium,” basically an internment camp for inks. ![]() At a time when people are doing things like kidnapping “inks” (people with tattoos) and dumping them across one of the borders, Mari and her friend Nely disappear. He meets and falls in love with Mari, an American citizen who was born in Guatemala. Journalist Finn Riordan is covering immigrant-related stories in a world where immigrants are required to wear identity tattoos and speak only English. ![]() I’m floored by Sabrina Vourvoulias’s dystopian fantasy Ink. ![]()
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