I loved this beautifully written, suspenseful, and emotionally resonant middle grade novel by Melissa Sarno. Like Sarno’s lovely debut, JUST UNDER THE CLOUDS, A SWIRL OF OCEAN has an incredibly vivid setting and gorgeous descriptions. The beach town of Barnes Bluff Bay is so well drawn, with charming characters and details that made me feel like I was there with main character Summer and the other locals as the tourists cleared out and the off-season began. And there were so many points when I wanted to pause to appreciate Sarno’s lyrical prose, playful choice of verbs, and just-right figurative language—her writing is never self-conscious or trying too hard; it’s just plain lovely.
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While this book has the clear sense of place and striking language that fans of JUST UNDER THE CLOUDS will recognize, it’s a very different book in many exciting ways, with a touch of magic and a fascinating mystery at its core. This is the story of 12-year-old Summer, who was found washed up on the shore when she was two years old by a woman named Lindy, who is the only family she’s ever known. But now, Lindy wants to change everything by letting her annoying boyfriend move in so it’s no longer just the two of them, and after getting caught in the current and swallowing a lot of ocean water, Summer begins dreaming about a girl named Tink and the summer she spent at Barnes Bluff Bay many years before, when she was the same age Summer is now. Summer becomes convinced that these dreams are connected to her own story and might reveal who she was before she became Lindy’s.
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Dream sections are woven into the main narrative, and they’re so compelling, both because of the mystery of how they’re connected to Summer and because Tink’s experience as a twelve-year-old complements Summer’s so beautifully: both are grappling with different kinds of changes in the people and world around them, and both long to hold onto aspects of their childhood in poignant ways. I love the way the novel ends—everything comes together in a powerful, satisfying way, and the balance of what gets revealed and what stays unknowable felt just right to me.
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This book reads slightly older than Sarno’s debut, and I think it’s a perfect choice for 10-12 year old readers, especially, who will relate to the kinds of change Summer and Tink are faced with. I couldn’t put it down!