rushthatspeaks: (Default)
[personal profile] rushthatspeaks
Author by way of [personal profile] janni; thank you.

I am having great difficulty describing this book. It is very hard to pin down. There are books that do not want to be pinned down, criticized, explained, or even sometimes discussed, because they are so subtle and delicate that anything you say about them feels, in some way, like a fundamental misrepresentation. You hear yourself say 'well, it's a kid's book', and then stop there because there are strands of the book that are clearly designed to be the sort of thing that works into a kid's hindbrain unnoticed but delights an adult reader or re-reader. You can say 'it's kind of about mermaids', except that mermaids specifically, as one standardly thinks of them, are evoked in this book by absence and allusion and things that are similar and things that aren't. You can say 'it's a fantasy novel', except that 'fantasy novel about mermaids' is going to lead readers to expect one sort of thing, and this is not that thing at all, at all, or if it is then only sideways.

Nothing I say about this book is true. It's always more complicated.

All right, one thing I can say clearly: this is a book that gives good ocean. It's as good ocean as the best ocean books I know, which are Jane Yolen's Neptune Rising and the Brittany section of Possession (which latter specific book-section I also find myself comparing this to in about sixty-three other directions, a very odd thing to say about a kid's book set in East Texas but I cannot help it).

Back to uncertainties.

This is a book where Keeper, who is ten, lives with Signe, who is not her mother, and their neighbors/family and animals on a beach in East Texas. Keeper's mother is not present because she was a mermaid. Keeper knows that. They go along pretty well, mostly, one kid, two dogs, one cat (well... hm. I told you things I said about this book would not be true), a seagull with a broken wing, a surf shop run out of a school bus and gumbo served to everybody as a family tradition on the night of the blue moon. Until Keeper manages to have the sort of day you can only have at ten, where unintentionally you genuinely ruin many, many of the things that are extremely important to the grownups around you and know how bad it is but not how to fix it; she decides to do something drastic and powerful, which is indeed drastic, but not the way she intended it.

I look back at that entire paragraph and I want to throw it out because the words are accurate but it leaves out all the everything significant.

Oh hell. Just read the thing. There are some books that don't want to be written about. This one was brilliant, in a very quiet manner.

Date: 2011-02-07 03:45 am (UTC)
sovay: (Default)
From: [personal profile] sovay
This one was brilliant, in a very quiet manner.

Right.

Date: 2011-02-07 04:13 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] janni.livejournal.com
It makes me happy that you loved this book, and I agree about how it's hard to talk about, because it's hard to talk about in ways that convey its magic ... I've pretty much decided that whenever Kathi Appelt publishes a novel, I just need to go out and read it.

The Underneath was lovely, too. Not quite as delicate, but all sorts of beautiful and mythic.

Date: 2011-02-08 07:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rushthatspeaks.livejournal.com
I need to look for The Underneath, then. Appelt has also made it onto my must-read list on the strength of this book.

Date: 2011-02-07 07:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com
You're the second person in my acquaintance to mention this book; from the first description, I knew I wanted to read it. I'm delighted that people as discerning--and different--as you and her both like it and feel complicated about it. Bodes well.

Date: 2011-02-08 07:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rushthatspeaks.livejournal.com
It's really good, and I think you specifically will like it.

Date: 2011-02-07 10:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shewhomust.livejournal.com
You had me right there, at "gives good ocean."

*adds to list*

Date: 2011-02-07 12:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com
This is a gorgeous book, but I think most nine year olds would be utterly lost. I really wish she'd aimed it up the ladder a ways: I think it would be perfect for teens.

Date: 2011-02-08 07:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rushthatspeaks.livejournal.com
Hmmm. I'd love to test it on an actual nine-year-old, but I don't know any right now. I have a suspicion that if I'd read it at nine I would have missed most of what is going on with the side characters but been able to follow Keeper's arc, because Keeper herself feels very her age to me, and then in later and older rereads I'd have started to get the rest of it. The problem with trying to aim it at older kids is that I think Keeper does have to be the age she is to do what she does-- even a couple of years older and she'd have thought it through differently.

Date: 2011-02-08 08:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com
Yes; I have no beef with how the characters are drawn--delicately, beautifully--but their very subtlety I think is for an older audience.

Date: 2011-04-27 02:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com
I've just finished reading it--and loved it--but I think if I had read it at ten, I would have been sorely, sorely, SORELY disappointed in the lack of magic as I was hoping for it. But oh man, reading it now? I adored it.

Date: 2011-02-07 03:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] deliasherman.livejournal.com
Sounds insterstitial to me. 8-).

In any case, I must read this: oceans, East Texas, foundlings, mermaids, indescribably numinosity (is that even a word? Never mind). Sounds right up my alley.

Date: 2011-02-08 02:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] janni.livejournal.com
The Underneath (same author) is just as interstitial--half middle grade animal story, half deep mythic Texas bayou fantasy. It's a book that has lots to say within the fantasy genre, but that's more known outside of it.

Date: 2011-02-08 07:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rushthatspeaks.livejournal.com
It is indeed right up your alley.

Date: 2011-02-07 11:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marzipan-pig.livejournal.com
I placed an order on it at the library and it looks like all 8 copies are already out, so, good to see it's popular!

Date: 2011-02-08 07:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rushthatspeaks.livejournal.com
That is good to hear!

Date: 2011-03-03 09:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jinian.livejournal.com
One of them is out to me. Want to read? :)

I both loved it and was very frustrated by it. The structure was so carefully calculated to dole out information slowly and make you feel the pacing of the events, and it made me CRAZY on both counts. But it's also gorgeous.

Date: 2011-03-16 05:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marzipan-pig.livejournal.com
OK now having read it, I would say I also wanted MORE to happen faster. I guess I wanted it to be a short story, except that wouldn't have really made any sense, the whole thing had to take a while to make it work.

It was really beautiful though.

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