Gamora and Nebula: Sisters in Arms (Marvel Rebels & Renegades)
Gamora and Nebula: Sisters in Arms (Marvel Rebels & Renegades) book cover

Gamora and Nebula: Sisters in Arms (Marvel Rebels & Renegades)

Hardcover – Box set, June 1, 2021

Price
$9.40
Format
Hardcover
Pages
400
Publisher
Marvel Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1368022255
Dimensions
6 x 1.3 x 8.7 inches
Weight
1.3 pounds

Description

From School Library Journal Gr 7 Up—When Gamora accepts a mission from an anonymous employer to retrieve the heart of Torndune, she has no idea the trouble that will follow. Nebula, who is equally manipulated, follows to confront Gamora. Through their journey, the two are reminded that they are stronger as sisters, until their progress is undone and a redemptive story becomes one of betrayal. Set before the events of Guardians of the Galaxy, the sisters have not yet become a brutal mercenary and a revenge-driven mess. At this time, they are just the abused, forged weapons of their father, the tyrannical titan Thanos. Nebula desperately desires kindness, and Gamora wants freedom. Their relationship is fractious but still viable. With so much lore, Marvel's galaxy already teems with life. What Lee adds is Torndune. The vivid sights, smells, and beliefs from the miner's hell starkly contrast with those of the pristine cult-corporation on Temple Ship. This is as much a story about the inequalities driven by the energy economy as it is about the sisters. VERDICT While no knowledge of Guardians of the Galaxy is required, this is a backstory for fans that deftly explains the relationship between Gamora and Nebula.—Rachel Forbes, Oakville P.L., Ont. Estranged sisters Gamora and Nebula race to retrieve the heart of a dying planet, guided by forces beyond their knowledge. Lee’s latest explores a turning point for two of the Marvel Universe’s most complicated figures. Green-skinned mercenary Gamora sells her skills and connections to the highest bidder―which is usually her father, Thanos. He’s manipulated and pitted his adopted daughters against one another for years but always favors Gamora, leading blue-skinned Nebula to make increasingly desperate attempts to prove her worth; recently, she lost an arm for her trouble. Practical, efficient Gamora doesn’t dwell on the rivalry with her sister: She’s had little reason to doubt their father’s methods or motivations. Gamora’s latest assignment is on Torndune, a once-verdant planet that’s been ravaged for its subterranean deposits of Crowmikite, a valuable energy source. She doesn’t know she’s been followed there by Nebula, who’s also in pursuit of Torndune's heart and who possesses critical information about Gamora’s mission. Everything changes when the sisters reconnect in the midst of a rebellion against the powerful entities who profit from Torndune’s natural resources and discover just who hired Gamora―and why. Gripping and well-choreographed fight sequences―both physical and verbal―establish each sister’s strengths and weaknesses and foreshadow a final confrontation. Transcripts of a chaotic meeting between the Grandmaster and several guests punctuate the sisters’ alternating perspectives. Come for the action, stay for the emotional depth.― ―Kirkus Reviews Gr 7 Up–When Gamora accepts a mission from an anonymous employer to retrieve the heart of Torndune, she has no idea the trouble that will follow. Nebula, who is equally manipulated, follows to confront Gamora. Through their journey, the two are reminded that they are stronger as sisters, until their progress is undone and a redemptive story becomes one of betrayal. Set before the events of Guardians of the Galaxy, the sisters have not yet become a brutal mercenary and a revenge-driven mess. At this time, they are just the abused, forged weapons of their father, the tyrannical titan Thanos. Nebula desperately desires kindness, and Gamora wants freedom. Their relationship is fractious but still viable. With so much lore, Marvel’s galaxy already teems with life. What Lee adds is Torndune. The vivid sights, smells, and beliefs from the miner’s hell starkly contrast with those of the pristine cult-corporation on Temple Ship. This is as much a story about the inequalities driven by the energy economy as it is about the sisters. VERDICT While no knowledge of Guardians of the Galaxy is required, this is a backstory for fans that deftly explains the relationship between Gamora and Nebula.― ―School Library Journal Mackenzi Lee holds a BA in history and an MFA in writing for children and young adults from Simmons College. She is the New York Times best-selling author of the historical fantasy novels Loki: Where Mischief Lies ; The Gentleman's Guide to Vice and Virtue , which won a 2018 Stonewall Honor Award and the New England Book Award; and its sequel, The Lady's Guide to Petticoats and Piracy . She is also the author of the nonfiction book Bygone Badass Broads, a collection of short biographies of forgotten women from history. In 2020, she was named one of Forbes 's 30 Under 30 for her work in bringing minority narratives to historical fiction. When not writing, she works as an independent bookseller, drinks too much Diet Coke, and naps with her Saint Bernard, Queenie. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The second book in the hit series from
  • New York Times
  • best-selling author Mackenzi Lee!
  • This three-book series explores the untapped potential and duality of heroism of popular characters in the Marvel Universe. The first book in these series,
  • Loki: Where Mischief Lies
  • , was an instant
  • New York Times
  • best seller and received two starred reviews.
  • Gamora arrives on Torndune―a once-lush planet that has been strip-mined for the power source beneath its surface―with a mission: collect the heart of the planet.
  • She doesn't know who sent her, why they want it, or even what the heart of a planet looks like. But as the right hand and daughter of Thanos, and one of the galaxy's most legendary warriors, her job is not to ask questions. Her job is to do what she's told, no matter the cost. What she doesn't know is that her sister Nebula is in hot pursuit. Nebula has followed Gamora to Torndune in hopes of claiming the planet's heart first and shaming her sister as vengeance for the part she played in Nebula losing her arm. While Gamora falls in with a group of miners attempting to overthrow the tyrannical mining corporation that controls their lives, Nebula allies herself with the Universal Church of Truth, whose missionaries wait on every street corner to recruit more followers and tithes for the Matriarch. Both sisters hope their alliance will give them access to one of the massive diggers capable of drilling to the center of the planet. But the closer they get to the heart of the planet―and to each other―the closer they get to uncovering the truth of what brought them there and the role they may unknowingly be playing in a twisted competition with galactic consequences. A competition they can never win . . . unless they learn to trust each other.
  • And trust is the biggest lie in the galaxy.
  • Complete your Marvel YA collection with these best-selling fan-favorite novels:
  • Loki: Where Mischief Lies by Mackenzi Lee
  • Loki: Where Mischief Lies
  • by Mackenzi Lee
  • Miles Morales: Spider-Man by Jason Reynolds
  • Miles Morales: Spider-Man
  • by Jason Reynolds
  • Unstoppable Wasp by Sam Maggs
  • Unstoppable Wasp
  • by Sam Maggs
  • Black Widow: Red Vengeance by Margaret Stohl
  • Black Widow: Red Vengeance
  • by Margaret Stohl
  • Black Widow: Forever Red by Margaret Stohl
  • Black Widow: Forever Red
  • by Margaret Stohl
  • Captain Marvel: Higher, Further, Faster by Liza Palmer
  • Captain Marvel: Higher, Further, Faster
  • by Liza Palmer

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(139)
★★★★
25%
(58)
★★★
15%
(35)
★★
7%
(16)
-7%
(-16)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Good backstory

My thoughts throughout this galactic read:

0% I loved the Loki book in this series and I really like both Gamora and Nebula’s characters so this could be interesting.
19% I just decided to try this new reviewing method so what are my thoughts on the first 19%... the world may never know...
20% “Welcome to the Devil’s Backbone” oooo what’s that??
35% I like Nebula’s chapters better. They give more insight into the sisters’ past and Gamora and Nebula’s relationship.
73% *GASP*!
73% Okay.. that was a little cheesy
100% Thanos sucks... also Oh, snap!! (Pun intended)

100%- I’m not a big fan of reading books where space or planets out in galaxies are the setting, but I did enjoy this one because of the main characters. There was enough action to keep me interested and a few twists and turns. I liked the way the ending ties into the MCU in a couple ways. Overall, I feel like this was Nebula’s backstory. There were some insights into Gamora as well but Nebula shined for me, and I liked it that way.
3 people found this helpful
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I’m Coming for You, Sister

Mackenzi Lee weaves an adventurous tale, that hints at the lives of Gamora and Nebula before Guardians of the Galaxy. Sent to retrieve the heart of a dying planet, Gamora just wants to get the job done before it kills her. What she doesn’t know is that Nebula is following her, determined to get revenge. On opposite sides of a deadly mining dispute, which one will win this game of lies?

Mackenzi Lee does a lot of world building, describing the crumbling planet of Torndune with great detail. Including a corrupt Universal Church of Truth, which gives the Marvel Universe a cynical view of religion. There is a whole cast of primarily female characters throughout the book. So, there is LGBTQ flirting if you squint, which is mostly used for humor. Though, the majority of these characters are plot driven and defined by their poor living conditions. Mackenzi Lee half-heartedly, and very inconsistently, gives Torndune characters such as Varsa an uneducated dialect. As for Gamora and Nebula, it is expected that their characterization would be mechanical. All this combined make this book a bit of a depressing and dry read.

Gamora and Nebula’s relationship, is the reason to read this book. Like the movies, they both have to survive living with Thanos, and being sisters is complicated. Gamora is entirely determined to survive no matter the cost, while Nebula wants to be acknowledged. This paired with the discordant desire to be sisters and find kindness, is what makes them interesting characters. Mackenzi Lee does explore this complex relationship well. With plenty of action and fighting, this book is exactly what you would expect a Gamora and Nebula book to be. The ending is not exactly MCU cannon, but there are plenty of marvel AUs that it’s possible.
3 people found this helpful
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A Good MCU Prequel Focused on Gamora and Nebula

Gamora and Nebula: Sisters in Arms by Mackenzi Lee is a movie tie-in novel based on the MCU characters of “Gamora and Nebula” from the various MCU Guardians of the Galaxy and Avengers films.

The Marvel Cinematic Universe excels at telling stories of comradeship, be it familial or in the more spiritual sense. But in Mackenzi Lee’s Gamora and Nebula: Sisters in Arms, as the title suggests, it is sisters that take centre stage. 

Set years before we ever meet them in their various MCU films, Gamora and Nebula follows the titular sisters on their separate, yet equally mysterious trips to the mining world of Torndune. Gamora has been sent there on a mission by an unknown entity, while Nebula arrives in pursuit of her sister. Both however, share the same goal: retrieve a mysterious item called the heart of the planet. 

The action scenes and the state of the planet Tordune work just fine, and set the mood very well, but it is the fraught relationship between the two Daughters of Thanos that is the driving force and the beating heart of the narrative. I was rooting for the two of them to join forces, and cheered when it happened, only to realize with a sinking heart that I was only at the halfway point of the book and there was no way this could last.

The tragic - and toxic - thing about being a child of Thanos is that neither girl ever really knows where she stands. They definitely know where they stand with their father - Gamora is the favourite, Nebula is the one he detests. What neither of them know for certain is where they stand with each other. And the fault with that lies entirely with Thanos. He constantly plays the two of them against one another, preying on their insecurities to ensure that they play his game exactly as he wants them to. Both have become equally proficient weapons for him, but only one is allowed to flourish, while the other is left to languish in the dark, unwanted and forgotten.

Though the book isn’t technically about him, we do get some development of the Mad Titan himself, as seen through the eyes of his daughters. Interestingly, author Mackenzi Lee works in an aspect from the comic books that was entirely absent from the MCU movies, and that is Thanos’ relationship with Death - or Lady Death, as she’s called here. 

Lady Death is a shadowy, omnipresent being that never speaks yet seems to have an undue influence over Thanos and his actions. Her addition to the novel and to the MCU in general is a chilling one, and is a wonderful way to lure in both comic readers, and fans of the films, to tell a story that will satisfy both.

This story broke my heart in the best kind of way. Not only the tragedy of the relationship between Gamora and Nebula, but the struggles each faces at the hands of a father who enjoys messing with their heads and hearts for nothing short of his own amusement (and that of his deathly paramour). Their incessant competition with one another brought to mind Nebula’s line from the second Guardians of the Galaxy movie: “You were the one who wanted to win, and I just wanted a sister.”. That, if nothing else, is the thesis statement for the book as a whole.

There are parts of this story that shocked me with how dark and upsetting they were. Not that I believe it’s inappropriate for a Young Adult audience, it’s very in line with the kind of thing you would see in the MCU. But with it being a book, we have that added benefit of reading what a character is feeling at any given moment that really drives the emotion home.  

As someone who is very familiar with the MCU, I knew going in that no matter what happened, Gamora and Nebula would not walk away from this story as friends or even allies. What I was not expecting was to fall hook, line, and sinker for their shared hope that maybe this time they could be sisters for real, only to be absolutely crushed when things returned to the expected status quo. That’s how you know it’s a well-told story: when you know how it’s going to end, but it doesn’t stop you from enjoying the ride. 

Overall, the book is an exciting look at the early backstory of Gamora and Nebula prior to their various appearances in the MCU Guardians of the Galaxy and Avengers films. The moments of them working together for a common end are brief but satisfying. The level of trust the two have grows towards the end of the story only to have it tragically snatched back. Strong character development and lots of action make Gamora and Nebula: Sisters in Arms a must read for any Marvel fan.
1 people found this helpful
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Absolutely loved it!

Absolutely loved it!
1 people found this helpful
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Great Series

I think this series is such a cool concept and really enjoyed Loki’s book so I was super excited to read this next installment. I thought Lee did a great job giving this book an appropriately more serious tone while still keeping a good amount of the humor she does so well. There are some dark moments in this story that I thought were handled in a way that not only was age appropriate but also true to what we see of the characters in the films. Some readers may have a hard time seeing a more up close look at Thanos’ manipulation and abuse of his daughters and there are several violent fights.

Seeing Gamora and Nebula’s relationship in this book was so interesting and helped set up and explain the tensions seen in the films. It was also interesting to see Thanos earlier in his plot and more of how he pit the girls against each other from both women’s perspectives. All around the characters were well done; the new people and settings were fascinating. I also loved seeing more of the Grand Master which was also where I thought Lee’s humor shone best.
1 people found this helpful
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Sister drama, on a planet level

If you love Mackenzi Lee, you need to read this book. Gamora and Nebula are still, well, read the book and find out!
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Great accompaniment to Guardians & Endgame

I read Lee's Loki: Where Mischief Lies last year and absolutely flipping loved it. So I was very excited to read this one! It didn’t quite compare to Loki, but I am a huge fan of the complicated relationship between sisters, Gamora and Nebula. This book helped shine more light on that sisterhood (a perfect prequel to Guardians/Infinity War), and as a stand-alone book is a great read about the complexity of sibling rivalry and the love that fuels it. (Did you know that Grandmaster and The Collector are also brothers?)

Action packed to the point of me actually struggling to envision what Lee was describing at times, but ultimately a really cool read for all Marvel fans. And I love the subtle (and not so subtle) ways that Lee makes her books LGBTQ-forward.

(BONUS: cool decoding opportunity for chapter titles)

Bechdel test: pass
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Great addition to the marvel universe

I've always wanted more about Gamora and Nebulas backstory and this did not disappoint! Gamora and Nebula takes place before the first Guardians of the Galaxy movie. It gives us a glimpse of their life and the beginnings of their rivalry.

Overall I really enjoyed this book, but it was a bit slow at times. I definitely will be checking out Makenzie Lee's other books!

Thank you to Netgalley and Disney Publishing Worldwide for the e-ARC!
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Action-packed but also emotional

I should have KNOWN how this was going to end!

I really liked seeing Gamora and Nebula in a time before the MCU, as they are navigating being Thanos’ kids that are expendable but still feeling beholden to him and trying to earn his love. This book was actually very emotional, as they realize they are being used and yet still fall into his traps. It made me so sad.

I thought Gamora and Nebula were developed well, but actually think Nebula was more relatable; I felt I got to know her better through the course of the book.

I don’t think scifi is really my genre, as I find it hard to understand terms often, but I enjoyed the action scenes, I’d which there were many. It took me til about 25% in to really get invested, but after that it was a quick read!
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A Marvelous Marvel Tale

Gamora is on a mission. Directed to the deteriorating planet of Torndune to retrieve an important object -- as yet unspecified -- on the orders of an unknown person to be delivered to an unknown location -- but Thanos has commanded her to follow through. And you don’t disobey your father when he is known as the Mad Titan.

Nebula is on a mission of her own, one that directly interferes with Gamora’s. Unbeknownst to her sister, Nebula is also on Torndune, after the same unknown object, and determined to beat Gamora to the finish line. And when the two cross paths, they must decide whether to put aside their differences and work together -- or to fight to the end as their father would have them do.

So here we have the once in a blue moon problem of loving a story so much that it’s hard to point out each individual thing adored. But for the sake of all considering whether to pick up this beauty of a book, I shall try.

First off, it should be mentioned that while it’s not necessary to know Gamora and Nebula and their history in the Marvel films, it certainly helps. This novel adds layer upon layer of depth and exploration and explanation as to how these adopted sisters came to be where they are when we first find them in the films.

The cruelty of Thanos knows no bounds. The mental manipulation the Titan employs with Gamora and Nebula -- Nebula in particular -- is on another level.

Mackenzi Lee’s writing is a work of art. Her choice of words paint a picture like no other, while also pulling at heartstrings with each emotional memory and encounter.

You get an exploration of sisterhood and family, chosen or not, and what that means on many levels. We see how the trust between Gamora and Nebula is built up and broken, sometimes in quick succession. And yet the sisters (almost) always find themselves fighting to save the other.

You get your classic Marvel action time and time again, described to perfection, creating a crystal clear picture in your mind of each scene as it unfolds.

You get the addition of a shadowy figure named Lady Death, who stands at Thanos’ side, who often only appears out of the corner of your eyes, who taunts and teases whenever death is near, welcoming and threatening at the same time.

We get glimpses of the Grandmaster, last seen in Thor: Ragnarok, a crossover I never expected but am so grateful to have.

Overall, this read hit every point for me. I was engrossed from beginning to end. I have no complaints.