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Siren's Storm

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Nothing has been the same for Will ever since what happened last summer. One day, on an ordinary sailing trip with his brother, there is a strange accident. When Will wakes up, he learns his brother has disappeared, presumed drowned. Worst of all, Will can't remember what happened—his family finds him unconscious, with no memory of the accident.
Now Will and his best friend and neighbor, Gretchen, are starting a new summer. Gretchen seems troubled—her sleepwalking habit is getting worse, and she keeps waking up closer and closer to the water. Will is drawn to Asia, the exotic new girl in town. Nobody knows where she's from—all Will knows is that her beauty and her mesmerizing voice have a powerful effect on people.
Then there is another mysterious drowning, and Will and Gretchen begin to wonder: Is Asia just another beautiful, wealthy summer resident? Or is she something entirely more sinister . . . and inhuman?
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    • Kirkus

      July 1, 2011

      A dreamy, hair-raising mystery in a Long Island fishing village–cum–upscale resort evokes the traditional horrors of coastal communities.

      Seventeen-year-old Will is a local in Walfang; Gretchen is "summer people," but she's Will's best friend anyway. They used to be three musketeers, along with Will's brother Tim, until a year ago when Tim died in a boating accident that should have killed both boys. Now Will and Gretchen try to renew their friendship in one of the creepiest summers either can remember. Will is drawn to Asia, a beautiful stranger with "green sea glass eyes." Gretchen worries about the local mad teenager who babbles portents about "seekriegers" and sings sea shanties. A 400-year-old gold doubloon turns up in a donation box, and an antique bone recorder—the spitting image of one found on Tim's body—appears in the local antique shop. Most frightening of all, Gretchen's sleepwalking, always worrying, has gotten downright dangerous. The more Will investigates, the more he sees connections with generations-old local mysteries—and possibly, incomprehensibly, stories far older than that. Walfang is exquisitely realized (occasionally too much so; narrative flow sometimes takes a backseat to painting Walfang with not-always-necessary detail); characters are defined as much by their place in society as by their behavior.

      Classical allusions fit perfectly in this transitional moment of an extremely New World setting. (Fantasy. 13-15)

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • School Library Journal

      January 1, 2012

      Gr 7-10-Will Archer, 17, is mourning the drowning death of his older brother, Tim, at their Long Island beachfront community a year earlier. A hurricane hits, and in the raging storm Will sees a girl with "green cat eyes, long black hair" who is later revealed to be Asia, the new girl in town. Watery descriptions indicate that she is not of this world and she eventually reveals herself to be an immortal "seekrieger," or siren, on a mission to deliver the as yet unidentified "Burning One" to Calypso (from ancient Greek mythology) and her vengeful band of siren sisters. In the meantime, Will's friend Gretchen is sleepwalking in dangerous places, while local unbalanced teen Kirk Wostler is making premonitions about "the Fury awakening." The first two-thirds of the book holds together: Will's and Gretchen's grief over the loss of Tim, the crazy murmurings of Kirk, and even the deliberate coyness of Asia all seem to be working toward some purpose. Instead of cresting smoothly toward a narrative climax, however, the story sinks under laboriously developed narrative threads and forced plotting. Asia's lengthy story of her life as a siren and an expository excerpt from a lost sea captain's journal fail to tie up loose ends. Plotlines and characterizations promisingly woven together in the beginning unfortunately unravel in an oddly enervated conclusion.-Janice M. Del Negro, GSLIS Dominican University, River Forest, IL

      Copyright 2012 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      August 1, 2011
      Grades 9-12 Seventeen-year-old Will is haunted by the memory of his drowned older brother; captivated by enigmatic green-eyed newcomer Asia; protective of girl-next-door Gretchen; and baffled by the mystery of the spiteful, shadowy creatures that seem to be massing in the scenic bay waters by the tourist town of Walfang. Papademetriou sets this modern-day story with mythic elements in a small town, whose character she creates with spare strokes and whose vacation-charm quality contrasts nicely with the somber problems of the protagonists and other characters. Other effective contrasts include Gretchen and the safety of the familiar juxtaposed with Asia, the Nereid, who is otherworldly and a potential threat to Gretchen's hidden love for Will. There is also Will himself, who is seen more clearly when paired with secondary character Angus, a puppy-like cub reporter. The mythic elements include vengeful mermaids (seekriegers); Calypso, from Homer's Odyssey; and a male version of Cassandra (named Kirk), who is constantly invoking the danger that does eventually come. Rounding off the satisfying mix, Papademetriou also inserts excerpts from a fictitious sea captain's log.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2012
      Will's brother, Tim, is presumed dead after a boating accident. Now Will and his childhood-friend-cum-crush Gretchen wonder whether the oddly compelling new girl in town, Asia, is connected to Tim's drowning and several others. The Calypso myth isn't fully explored (lengthy expository narrative in a sea captain's log aside), but the mystery is engaging.

      (Copyright 2012 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • Kirkus

      July 1, 2011

      A dreamy, hair-raising mystery in a Long Island fishing village-cum-upscale resort evokes the traditional horrors of coastal communities.

      Seventeen-year-old Will is a local in Walfang; Gretchen is "summer people," but she's Will's best friend anyway. They used to be three musketeers, along with Will's brother Tim, until a year ago when Tim died in a boating accident that should have killed both boys. Now Will and Gretchen try to renew their friendship in one of the creepiest summers either can remember. Will is drawn to Asia, a beautiful stranger with "green sea glass eyes." Gretchen worries about the local mad teenager who babbles portents about "seekriegers" and sings sea shanties. A 400-year-old gold doubloon turns up in a donation box, and an antique bone recorder--the spitting image of one found on Tim's body--appears in the local antique shop. Most frightening of all, Gretchen's sleepwalking, always worrying, has gotten downright dangerous. The more Will investigates, the more he sees connections with generations-old local mysteries--and possibly, incomprehensibly, stories far older than that. Walfang is exquisitely realized (occasionally too much so; narrative flow sometimes takes a backseat to painting Walfang with not-always-necessary detail); characters are defined as much by their place in society as by their behavior.

      Classical allusions fit perfectly in this transitional moment of an extremely New World setting. (Fantasy. 13-15)

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

Formats

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.5
  • Lexile® Measure:670
  • Interest Level:9-12(UG)
  • Text Difficulty:3

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