The Genie Game by Jordan Ifueko comes out today! It’s extremely exciting to have the start of a new middle grade series from this beloved author. Joining it this Spring, we also have The Somewhat Wicked Witch of Brigandale, a cozy new standalone from C.M. Waggoner, and A Long and Speaking Silence, a new installment in the Singing Hills Cycle by Nghi Vo, which can be read in any order! All these authors are ones I watch for, and it feels fitting for Spring to have these fresh starts.
I love Jordan Ifueko’s Raybearer books, which are YA, and maybe I loveThe Maid and the Crocodile, which takes place in the same world, even more? After those, I was interested to see Ifueko go younger in her audience, since it feels like a lot of YA authors I enjoy (including Holly Black, Cassandra Clare, Maureen Johnson and John Green) are trying out writing for grown-ups lately.
The Genie Game is indeed aimed at tweens and young teens, but it doesn’t pull any punches. It presents our loveable heroine in a corporate dystopia, her parents brainwashed by oligarchs. She gets sucked into indenture slavery, where she is forced to play a “game” granting wishes to magically fuel the three corporate entities that control her world. Many of the wishes are for small things that provide a bandaid over much larger problems the corporations themselves have created.
The Genie Game kind of reminds me of The True Meaning of Smekday by Adam Rex in its tone, but Ifueko’s satire is more pointed. In that way it also kind of reminds me of Dungeon Crawler Carl for kids, with its enforced and dangerous gameplay under the auspices of an uncaring and extremely powerful entity.








