The depths

Nicole Lesperance

Book - 2022

After suffering a near-fatal freediving accident, seventeen-year-old Addie Spencer tags along on her mother's honeymoon to a private island where she unearths dark secrets--a child ghost, moody flowers, and a deep pool where no one feels pain--before realizing the island might not be willing to let her go.

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Subjects
Genres
Ghost stories
Paranormal fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Razorbill 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Nicole Lesperance (author)
Physical Description
368 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 14 and up.
HL780L
ISBN
9780593465363
9780593465387
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Not everything that shines is gold. This is most assuredly the case for the remote, private Eulalie Island, where 17-year-old Addie has been brought along on her mother's honeymoon, due to the girl's recent free-diving accident. While other visitors might be immediately charmed by the island's natural beauty--gorgeous white flowers, lush forest, white-sand beaches--Addie's not convinced that all is as peaceful as it seems. One day, Addie meets a mysterious boy on the beach, triggering numerous inexplicable events: the flowers suddenly turn pink, Addie begins sleepwalking, and she also stumbles across a girl's ghost in the woods. It's clear to Addie that something sinister is taking over the island. Yet, she finds herself lured by its promises, including the chance to heal her lungs so she can free dive once more. She decides to explore the island's history and discovers that the area is filled with dark secrets, including some regarding the deaths of two young girls there years ago. Now Addie is caught between feeling supported by the island's eerie powers and realizing the dangers of engaging with them. Full of Victorian storytelling elements and tinged with drama and danger, this story will ensnare readers with its lush setting and mysterious air. Lesperance effortlessly builds a beautiful, menacing world into which readers will willingly dive headlong.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Utilizing the mystery, allure, and beauty of a tropical island paradise, Lesperance (The Wide Starlight) deftly cultivates a menacing tale with a hint of horror. Seventeen-year-old Addie is on track to be one of the country's best women free divers until an accident, which renders her dead for eight and a half minutes, derails her plans. Afraid to leave Addie home alone, her mother forces Addie to accompany her and her new stepfather on their honeymoon to Eulalia Island. Despite the awkwardness and relative isolation, she soon befriends 15-year-old Billy and his older brother, Sean, sons of the island's caretakers. As Addie explores the environment, strange things begin occurring; birds literally call her name, and flora change color and inexplicably bloom in places where Addie's blood drips from a cut on her leg. Addie immerses herself in the island's history while growing closer to Sean, but as the bizarre events increase in frequency, she worries that she might not leave this tropical getaway alive. With florid literary flair and a keen attention to detail, Lesperance offers unique twists on well-loved supernatural tropes while compassionately exploring friendship founded on shared trauma and Addie's search for herself beyond diving. Characters present as white. Ages 14--up. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A tropical paradise is haunted by a dangerous secret. After elite athlete Addie's horrific free-diving accident--she's dead for eight and a half minutes--her mother brings Addie along on her honeymoon so Addie won't be alone as her injured lungs recover. Their destination's Eulalie Island, a private Caribbean island. Apart from the island's caretakers (and their two sons), they have the island to themselves. So why does it sound like the birds are calling Addie's name--and who's the giggling child she keeps hearing? As more strange things happen--the white flowers turn pink and then darken, vines behave strangely--Addie digs deeper into the history of the island, from its 1700s castaway namesake to a doomed Bostonian family from 1843. (The brutal colonialism of the region is mentioned, but Eulalie explicitly has no history of Indigenous peoples or European settlement.) Addie grows closer to the son of one of the caretakers and is introduced to a deep freshwater sinkhole where she feels no pain and can hold her breath long enough to free dive again. But being favored by the island and its supernatural inhabitants proves dangerous to more than just Addie. The tropical setting is refreshing for its Victorian ghost-story vibe, the characters are likable, and the story's mystery threads weave together into a delightfully eerie tapestry. Characters default to White. Readers will dive in so deep they might forget to come up for air. (Horror. 13-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Eulalie Island is crescent shaped, its inner edge a powdered sugar beach lined with swaying palm trees. Beyond the palms lies a forest so lush and vibrant that the word green doesn't feel adequate to describe it. The scent of dead seaweed and tropical flowers floods my nostrils and lungs, filling them with an itchy need to cough. Beside me, the seaplane bobs, tethered to the dock. It was a long journey from Saint Thomas, soaring over islands and islands that grew smaller and flatter until they were just sandbars, then gone. For a long time, we floated through a cloudless sky over an endless ocean, and there was nothing but blue. It took every ounce of my strength to not yank the plane door open and dive into that blue. But I didn't. And now we're here. At the private island that's going to be my private prison for the next two weeks. I'm the third wheel on my mother's honeymoon with a man who wears pressed khaki shorts and belts with little whales on them. She was too afraid to leave me alone with my injuries after the accident, and I'd never admit this out loud, but I'm glad she didn't. "Come on, sweetie!" She waves from the beach, her other arm wrapped around David's waist. It doesn't feel right that one twenty-­minute ceremony can make you someone's daughter, step-­ or not. But she's been planning this honeymoon for almost a year, and I am not going to ruin the trip for her. I pull an elastic off my wrist and twist my sweaty, light brown hair into a knot on top of my head. "Go ahead, Addie." Ken Carpenter, the island's bearded caretaker, leaps onto the seaplane to help the pilot with our suitcases. "Melinda will get you folks settled in at the house, and we'll bring your bags up." "You're going to love it." His wife, a woman in a billowing caftan with silver-­streaked hair, gives me a sympathetic smile. Everyone here seems to already know about my accident, which is both embarrassing and a relief because I won't have to explain why I unexpectedly cough up blood sometimes. Leaving the seaplane--­and that gorgeous turquoise water I'm not allowed to dive in--­we head for the beach. A stone jetty stretches out even farther than the dock, with a white lighthouse at its end. The scent of flowers is so strong I can taste it, sweet and cloying and tinged with something almost rotten. It thickens as we approach the forest, and I swallow hard, then take a shallow breath. Don't cough. "Isn't this spectacular?" says my mom as we join them on the beach. I plaster a smile onto my mouth and nod. "Just wait until you see the rest," says David, though he's never been here before either. Melinda leads us onto a packed-­dirt path that cuts through the woods, and as we pass under the leafy canopy, it takes a few seconds for our eyes to adjust to the dimness. My mother grabs my wrist. "Oh, Addie, look!" White flowers bloom absolutely everywhere: hibiscus and lilies and amaryllis and so many more that I don't know the names of. Crowding the bushes, peeking out of the shrubs underfoot, climbing the trees in slender vines. Not a single blossom or bud that isn't white. I take a slow, soupy breath, willing myself not to wheeze. I am not going to ruin this trip. Not after I almost made her miss her wedding. "So pretty," I say. Melinda swats a bug from her face. "It gets humid down here, but don't worry. There's always a breeze up at the house." Sunlight sifts through the giant ferns overhead as I stop to catch my breath. A thousand birds are shrieking, though I can't see any of them. I wonder if they're all white like the flowers. As beautiful as this is, I can't wait to find the house and the breeze so I can get this floral stench out of my lungs. Ahead, Melinda, David, and my mom are climbing a set of stone steps, but I don't think I can make it up just yet. My face is hot and cold at the same time, and black specks flit in my vision. Bending low, I brace my hands on my knees. If I can train myself not to breathe for seven minutes, I can train myself not to cough. And I can train myself to heal. It's just a question of control. Mind over matter. Slowly, the need to clear my lungs eases, and I lean back against the trunk of a huge old tree. Shutting my eyes, I breathe, gently breathe, and let it all settle. I try to find my center, my inner silence, but lately whenever things get quiet, my brain circles back to the accident. The same nagging thoughts circle like flies, constant reminders that everything is different now. That I'm different now, even though I still have no understanding of what happened to me when I died. Something pulls me out of my thoughts, bringing me back to the flower-­filled woods. It's too silent, I realize. The birds have stopped screeching. The insects are no longer buzzing. Then something rustles behind me, and a child's laugh plinks like a music box. "Hello?" I call. The back of my neck tingles like someone's watching me, but if they are, they could be anywhere in this chaotic jumble of plants and trees. They could be hiding an arm's length away and I'd never know. "Hello?" I repeat. "Is somebody there?" Again, that laugh, high-­pitched and the slightest bit broken, and it sounds nothing like a bird. That sound is human. Leaves rustle suddenly, and I jolt as a black cat slinks out of a white-­flowered bush. It swishes against my shin, and as it dashes away up the steps, I have to bend over again to catch my breath and let my rocketing heartbeat calm. "Kylo, you naughty thing! How did you get out again?" Melinda's voice floats down through the eerily still trees. Slowly, my panic fades, but the crawling sensation on my skin does not. That laughter definitely wasn't a cat. I'm sure it was a child. "Is someone there?" I call. The forest is silent. Excerpted from The Depths by Nicole Lesperance All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.