The deep

Helen Dunmore, 1952-

Book - 2009

When the ferocious shape-shifting Kraken awakes after thousands of years and threatens the Mer, Sapphire agrees to help them by going with her brother Conor and their friend Faro into the Deep to lull the monster back to sleep.

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Review by Booklist Review

Just when the Tide Knot had been sealed and the village of St. Pirans had begun to recover from Katrina-like devastation caused by its unleashing, siblings Sapphy and Conor get word of more rumblings from the sea kingdom of Ingo. An underwater monster called the Kraken has awakened, threatening more calamity unless he can be appeased with the sacrifice of Mer children. The two heroes dive in for another suspenseful battle against evil, using their cleverness, courage, and combination Mer-human DNA. Dunmore's fine writing delivers again for fans of the Ingo series, with the promise of more installments to wrap up plot details.--O'Malley, Anne Copyright 2009 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Horn Book Review

(Intermediate, Middle School) The Kraken is awakening and will destroy the undersea world of Ingo unless he receives a sacrifice of two Mer children. Summoned to a Mer gathering, Sapphire, who learned to balance her dual Mer and human heritage in Ingo and The Tide Knot (rev. 9/06 and 1/08), agrees to a quest: she will dive to the Deep where the pure-blooded Mer cannot go in order to lull the Kraken back to sleep. In exchange, her human father, entrapped in the Mer world, will be allowed to choose between being Mer and being human. Faro (a Mer with some human blood) and Sapphire's brother Conor join her on the dangerous quest, riding a motherly whale down to where the cold and dark and pressure can easily snuff a life -- and there the shape-shifting Kraken snares them in a deadly game of deception. The pacing is deliberate but the stakes are relentlessly high as Dunmore explores themes of identity and belonging, as well as the price of deceiving oneself: Sapphire's main weapon against the Kraken is a mirror that shows those things about themselves most people would rather not confront. Sapphire's picturesque life on the coast of Cornwall and the enchanting and perilous world underwater are depicted with equal depth and resonance in Dunmore's commanding prose. From HORN BOOK, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.