The Sea Is Salt and So Am I

The Sea Is Salt and So Am I

by Cassandra Hartt

Narrated by Lori Gardner, Nick Mills, Tom Picasso

Unabridged — 12 hours, 27 minutes

The Sea Is Salt and So Am I

The Sea Is Salt and So Am I

by Cassandra Hartt

Narrated by Lori Gardner, Nick Mills, Tom Picasso

Unabridged — 12 hours, 27 minutes

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Overview

West Finch is one hurricane away from falling into the sea.
Yet sixteen-year-old Harlow Prout is determined to save her small Maine hometown. If only she could stop getting in her own way and find someone-anyone-willing to help. But her best friend, Ellis MacQueen, “fixes” problems by
running away from them-including his broken relationship with his twin brother, Tommy. And Tommy's depression has hit a new low, so he's not up for fixing anything.
In the wake of the town's latest devastating storm, Tommy goes out for a swim that he doesn't intend to survive. It's his unexpected return that sets into motion a sea change between these three teens. One that tests old loyalties, sparks new
romance, and uncovers painful secrets. And nothing stays secret in West Finch for long.
Exquisitely honest and shimmering with emotion, The Sea Is Salt and So Am I is a captivating multi-POV story that probes the depths of what it means to love and trust-both ourselves and others.

Editorial Reviews

AUGUST 2021 - AudioFile

Narrator Lori Gardner portrays Harlow, a teen who tries to balance her time between her best friend, Ellis, and her new romantic interest, Ellis’s twin brother, Tommy, who has been grappling with mental health issues. Narrator Tom Picasso establishes a youthful timbre and hurt tone for Ellis as his friendship with Harlow becomes more distant, and he struggles to understand and empathize with Tommy. Narrator Nick Mills creates a gruff voice for Tommy, which captures his anger but at times sounds a bit too mature for the teen. Nonetheless, listeners will enjoy the drama and passion as Harlow, Ellis, and Tommy discover the importance of family, friendship, and love. M.D. © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

05/03/2021

White and 16, identical twins Tommy and Ellis, as well as Ellis’s best friend Harlow, all live in the fictional town of West Finch, Maine, which is collapsing into the ocean—a metaphor for the precariousness of the teens’ lives. After Tommy, who is depressed, attempts to drown himself in the same sea, Harlow’s efforts to help him, despite their tense past, result in a romance that poisons Harlow’s complex friendship with Ellis and reveals a history of toxic secrets. The first-person narration shifts indistinctly between Harlow, a violet-eyed teen with a drive to fix coastlines and people; Tommy, an artist who has lost his ability to draw (“Art happens in my head and my head is no longer a safe place to be”); and Ellis, a competitive runner who dates across the gender spectrum and, following a childhood accident, uses a prosthetic leg. Debut author Hartt portrays Tommy’s depression persuasively, but temporal and physical details are less carefully rendered. The book opens with a trigger warning and concludes with an author’s note that includes resources for LGBTQ youth and readers navigating mental illness. Ages 14–up. Agent: Jennifer Rofé, Andrea Brown Literary. (June)

From the Publisher

Praise for The Sea Is Salt And So Am I:
A July 2021 Kids' Indie Next Pick
A Bustle Best Debut of Spring 2021

“Capturing the turbulence of teenagers and the enormity of their feelings, The Sea Is Salt and So Am I is tailor-made to become a Netflix hit in the very near future.”—E! Online

"A compulsively readable tale of secrets, loyalties, and lies in a small town."—Culturess

"Beautiful and heartbreaking."—The Young Folks

"At once turbulent and tender, this deeply-felt debut will make your heart swell time and time again."—Julia Drake, author of The Last True Poets of the Sea

The Sea is Salt And So Am I is a breathtaking debut, filled with complicated characters and feelings that permeate the pages with their honesty. Achingly beautiful.”—Rachael Lippincott, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Five Feet Apart

“Hartt is uninterested in easy answers, unspooling mysteries and emotions that shift what we thought we knew about characters caught in realistically nonlinear growth. . . . A melancholy and thoughtful debut.”—Kirkus Reviews

"Readers will be swept away by Cassandra Hartt's lyrical writing . . . perfect for fans of Jandy Nelson's I'll Give You the Sun and Jennifer Niven's All the Bright Places."—Alyssa Raymond, Cooper Dog Books

Raw, honest, and nearly impossible to put down . . . even when you feel like you are drowning, this book reminds you there is always something to pull you back up for air."—Colleen Regan, An Unlikely Story

“An unflinching look at the waves of depression, and how the riptides can carry our loved ones away with us, The Sea Is Salt and So Am I is a must-read."—Abby Rice, The Briar Patch

"An incredible and delicate coming-of-age story.”—Kelsy April, Bank Square Books

"This book will make your heart clench with anxiety and tender intimacy. For fans of Nina LaCour, Celeste Ng, and Tillie Walden."—Cassie Duncanson, Wellesley Books

“This book gives an unflinchingly raw look at depression . . . adds a layer of story that stings like salt."— Nichole Cousins, Yankee Bookshop

School Library Journal

★ 06/04/2021

Gr 10 Up—Harlow is an environmental activist hopelessly in love with her best friend, Ellis, even though she's hooking up with his twin brother Tommy. Heartbreaker Ellis is bisexual and an athletic runner with a limb difference. Each teen is written with aching authenticity. They often make the wrong decisions and fixate on their mistakes, becoming so self-involved that they can't see how they are affecting one another. This long and often slow-paced narrative alternates among the three points of view. Ellis and Tommy are extremely different, but both experience suicidal ideation, presented in vastly different ways. The novel starts with Tommy's attempt to drown himself, but he is eventually saved. Ellis also attempts suicide early in the story, after driving a car into a tree while under the influence. The work adeptly examines the different ways teens deal with similar issues and pressures. Additionally, there is an overarching environmental theme. The teens live in a small Maine town threatened by erosion, and many businesses and houses are collapsing into the ocean. Many teens will identify with the protagonists and their societal and personal struggles. The characters are presumed white. VERDICT Character-driven and profoundly moving, Hartt's debut will tug at teens' heartstrings and is ideal for fans of Jennifer Niven and Nina LaCour.—Melanie Leivers, Burnsville, MN

AUGUST 2021 - AudioFile

Narrator Lori Gardner portrays Harlow, a teen who tries to balance her time between her best friend, Ellis, and her new romantic interest, Ellis’s twin brother, Tommy, who has been grappling with mental health issues. Narrator Tom Picasso establishes a youthful timbre and hurt tone for Ellis as his friendship with Harlow becomes more distant, and he struggles to understand and empathize with Tommy. Narrator Nick Mills creates a gruff voice for Tommy, which captures his anger but at times sounds a bit too mature for the teen. Nonetheless, listeners will enjoy the drama and passion as Harlow, Ellis, and Tommy discover the importance of family, friendship, and love. M.D. © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2021-04-30
Three small-town teens navigate sea changes both personal and environmental.

After another storm in West Finch, Maine, withdrawn artist Tommy MacQueen attempts suicide while on a swim. His survival triggers events that change both his future and those of his confident twin, Ellis, a bisexual amputee and track star, and Ellis’ best friend, activist Harlow Prout. Estranged ever since Harlow entered their lives and drawn further apart by Tommy’s depression, the MacQueen brothers struggle to regain their childhood bond. Harlow begins a secret relationship with Tommy out of pity, but what’s meant as a distraction becomes a tender romance between the formerly bitter enemies. Harlow and Ellis’ volatile friendship is given equal weight in the narrative: Vacillating between codependency and profound devotion, their relationship is the novel’s heart. Insular West Finch is as atmospheric and colorful as Tommy’s paintings, overshadowed by the acceptance of its own eventual destruction through coastal erosion. Hartt is uninterested in easy answers, unspooling mysteries and emotions that shift what we thought we knew about characters caught in realistically nonlinear growth. The points of view are specific and well realized, with belligerent, loving Harlow, a fixer unable to stop breaking things, being a particular standout. Tommy’s recovery proceeds in complicated fits and starts; his depression is portrayed with sensitivity. Main characters default to White.

A melancholy and thoughtful debut. (author's note) (Fiction. 14-18)

Product Details

BN ID: 2940173178275
Publisher: Recorded Books, LLC
Publication date: 06/08/2021
Edition description: Unabridged
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