Book Review: Dengue Boy by Michel Nieva

Cover of the book Dengue Boy by Michel Nieva, tr. by Rahul Bery
Dengue Boy
by Michel Nieva, tr. by Rahul Bery
Astra, 2025

This review was first published by Booklist on November 1, 2024.

**STARRED REVIEW** Nieva’s debut expands his O’Henry award-winning short story into a full novel. The result is a dystopian fever dream that’s equal parts poetic and profane, beautiful and splattered with gore. In the year 2272, the polar ice caps have melted, Patagonia is a tropical archipelago, Antarctica is the new Caribbean, terraforming technology is used to create paradises only for the rich, and global corporations make fortunes off of pandemics. Dengue Boy is a mutant mosquito, born to a human mother, who is ostracized as child and grows up to wreak destruction. His foil is El Dulce, an entirely self-centered tween who helps smuggle contraband through Patagonia, whose only real interest is getting his hands on a prime video game console, and who comes face-to-face with a primordial force beyond reckoning. Furthermore, there’s a hallucinogenic video game that breaks the concept of time and causation. Dengue Boy is a trip. It’s a cry of rage against the inhumanity of corporate greed, a mourning for the destruction of our climate, a warning of the dangers we’re unlocking from the thawing ground, and a heartbreaking loss of hope for the future of mankind. It’s a pessimistic and transformative experience that is powerful, challenging, rewarding, and difficult to sit with.

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