This book takes place in a time that’s going to sound very familiar to our own. As the story starts, Bird Gardener, age 12, lives with his dad who works at the University library shelving books. They live in a tiny dormitory apartment on campus, and his mom, Margaret Miu, has left the family. Bird’s dad reminds him to tell anyone who asks that they don’t have anything to do with her anymore.
But then Bird, or Noah as he is now known, receives a note, a picture that he knows is from his mother. He starts thinking about his mom and remembering her before she left the family when he was nine. Noah doesn’t have any friends to confide in. His only friend – Sadie – is gone also, having left or been taken from her most recent foster family. Sadie had been determined to find her parents after she had been taken from the family home.
Noah’s dad wants him to avoid trouble at all costs and especially avoid the demonstrations against PACT, which is a government directive to “Preserve American Culture and Tradition.” But the letter Noah had received had stirred something in him and he begins a secret quest to remember his mom and the stories she had told him. His search takes him to libraries searching for her books of poetry, which, like many books, had been removed from the shelves and been destroyed. He becomes aware of the strong anti-Asian sentiment in the world. But he also finds that his mom has become a voice for the voiceless, telling stories of the children who had been taken by government authorities to protect them from “dangerous” influences, the “missing hearts” of the title.
This was an interesting dystopian novel, which is scarily relatable to current day events.





