Below

Below - Meg McKinlay You know, I didn't know what to expect from this book. Originally published in Australia in 2011, it did draw my attention because it is extremely difficult to get Aussie fic in the US unless you pay top dollar for it or know someone who will ship it to you. It was titled Surface Tension in Australia, and I have to admit to liking that title better than the one Candlewick chose. I do like the current cover a lot better though. The colors draw me in and it does fit the story of the book well.For me, this book was all about tone and I think the author did an amazing job capturing the mystery, the unsettling feeling, and the entire book felt haunting to me. Not scary at all, but very tense and tightly woven. It is not an extremely plot heavy book, but the mystery is compelling and the characters engaging.And the other thing that i must point out is how original and different the topic is. The blurb is what originally made me want to read it because it sounded like nothing I had ever heard of before. Original plots are hard to find these days, and though it's a pretty linear story line, it does get there in some unusual ways. The writing was mentally stimulating and the imagery really captured my focus. Even though the book was set in Australia, at times it is kind of hard to tell. That can be a good thing or a bad thing, depending on who you are.Cassie is a wonderful protagonist. She's twelve, curious, and exactly like someone her age should be. She wasn't alive when the town her family grew up in was flooded (born that day actually), and she feels left out because they have all these memories that don't include her. She has two older siblings that were planned pregnancies, but Cassie was an accident. So, under the Lower Grange Reservoir are many of her family's memories. Rather than swim at the public pool and dodge band-aids, Cassie decides to swim at the lake without the knowledge of her family. There she finds something and our mystery truly begins. It takes a little bit for the story to get going but I never found the exposition or build-up boring. I don't read a lot of contemporaries and I really enjoyed this one. Candlewick puts out some great titles year after year, and I do hope you decide to give it a chance. It's short, mesmerizing, and I would not be surprised to see it nominated for some awards this upcoming season. I definitely think it deserves to find an audience. Oh, and swimming in a lake above a drowned town would be creepy as hell. Favorite Quote:"You'd think that when you sink something under five thousand swimming pools' worth of water, it'd be drowned and gone. You'd think it would be done with. But somewhere inside me, I knew--you can't just drown a town and call it over. Eventually, things have a way of floating to the surface."