Waves

Waves

by Sharon Dogar

Narrated by James Clamp

Unabridged — 7 hours, 59 minutes

Waves

Waves

by Sharon Dogar

Narrated by James Clamp

Unabridged — 7 hours, 59 minutes

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Overview

“Where is she? And what was she doing out on the waves that night?”

For Hal, now, this summer is different. Sure he's spending it, as always, with his family at their cottage on the wild west coast of England. But this summer he meets Jackie, beautiful, impetuous Jackie. Lying with her on the beach while she sculpts mermaids from wet sand-it's paradise. Or would be, if only he didn't keep hearing the desperate pleas of his lost sister Charley in his head . . .
For Charley, then, last summer was different. Pete, the impossibly gorgeous surf god, wanted her, she couldn't believe it! To lick the sand off his lips, to let the sun tan the outline of her hand over his heart-she'd do anything to be with him. Even if it meant sneaking out and leaving her tagalong brother Hal behind. Just for one night. How could she have known what would happen by dawn?
Set at a beach where growing up goes wrong, Waves is a coming-of-age mystery about first love and tragic loss. About a family drowning in sorrow, and the courageous son struggling against the tide to save them.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

Gothic romance fans will eagerly dive into this eerie debut novel, which traces the ethereal connection between Hal, a British teen, and his comatose older sister, Charley. While 15-year-old Charley hovers between life and death in a hospital, her body-kept alive by machines-remains motionless, but her mind is active ("It's as though the Earth is holding me down, packed tight in gravity," she laments). Meanwhile, Hal seems able to read some of his sister's thoughts. His feeling that Charley is trying to communicate with him grows stronger once he returns to the family's vacation house, where Charley's nearly lifeless body washed up on the shore the previous summer. ("From somewhere far away, I think I can hear... her hospital breath, falling over me in waves," says he). At the same time that Hal feels a burning urgency to solve the mystery of his sister's accident, he finds himself attracted to freckle-faced Jackie, whose brother may hold the key to what happened to Charley in the sea. A series of flashbacks convey the perspectives of both Hal and Charley, as Dogar artistically parallels two budding romances. Hal's infatuation with Jackie neatly mirrors the relationship Charley had with Jackie's brother, Pete. Although foreshadowing weighs heavily on the story line and Charley's frequent bemoanings about being trapped inside her body sometimes veer towards melodrama, teens intrigued by supernatural events will likely not be bothered by the book's less than subtle aspects. Ages 12-up. (Apr.) Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.

School Library Journal

Gr 8 & Up - "I'm in a cupboard. A dark cupboard, and it's too small for me. The walls press against my flesh . . . .Through a chink of light where the door is barely open, I think I can hear voices. So many voices. Help me!" These are the unspoken words of Hal's sister Charley, lying in a coma ever since the previous summer's late-night surfing accident on a Cornwall beach. Now it is July once again and Hal's family is off to Brackinton Haven for their annual holiday, leaving Charley behind for the first time. Torn between his anger at his sister for devastating the family and his desire to discover exactly what happened, Hal hears her voice more and more often. As he gets to know the surfer crowd that Charley hung out with and begins a romance with the younger sister of Charley's boyfriend, Hal slowly begins to unravel the mystery. Told in a series of episodes with headings such as "Charley. Then," "Charley. Hospital. Now," and "Hal. Graveyard. Now," the narrative skillfully shifts in time and point of view. Readers of Alice Sebold's The Lovely Bones(Little, Brown, 2002) and Peter Dickinson's Eva(Delacorte, 1989) will be intrigued by Dogar's exploration of such questions as: Where exactly is a person when she no longer inhabits her earthly body? Can she communicate with those she has left behind? Both suspenseful and thoughtful, action packed and atmospheric, this novel is compelling and memorable.-Ginny Gustin, Sonoma County Library System, Santa Rosa, CA

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

Kirkus Reviews

Every year, Hal's family vacations at their summer home in Brackinton on England's coast. However, things are different this year: His spirited older sister Charley won't be there, and the family's return means painfully revisiting the site of Charley's mysterious accident, which left her comatose. From the moment Hal returns to Brackinton, Charley's thoughts eerily start mixing with his own urging him to remember the details of her accident. With the help of Jack, Hal's crush and the younger sister of Charley's boyfriend, Hal learns to listen closely to Charley's disembodied voice and to piece together memories of that fateful night until he finally understands the shocking truth behind Charley's accident. Skillfully narrated through Hal and Charley's alternating voices and thoughts, Dogar frequently and seamlessly shifts between time and place to create a haunting mystery packed with suffering, hope and personal growth. Riveting. (Fiction. YA)

From the Publisher


Booklist
Dogar will make more than a glancing impression on teens with this elaborately structured debut, encompassing grief, suspense, romance, and emotional bonds so intense they slip past the usual boundaries of consciousness. At the novel's center are the unknown events that left 15-year-old Charley washed up on a Cornwall beach, comatose. The following summer, her bereft family returns to the same seaside community, where younger brother Hal begins, inexplicably, to channel his hospitalized sister's memories, connecting her injury to the brother of the girl he loves. The fragmented narrative leaps chaotically among Charley's, Hal's, and their telepathically fused perspectives, and not every reader will buy the supernatural elements. But teens who don't balk at nonlinear narratives will sink into Dogar's lyrical, free-associative writing, as expressive about tender romantic moments (such as the sharing of breath, “sweet and close and tangling”) as it is about the burden of loss, “like being stuck in a half-life, like some nuclear dump, with millions of years to go before the poison burns itself away.” –Jennifer Mattson

AUG/SEP 07 - AudioFile

Fifteen-year-old Hal found his sister Charley washed up on a Cornwall beach, unconscious. A year later, as his parents wrestle with disconnecting Charley from life support, the family returns to Cornwall. Waves of Charley's thoughts and memories float eerily into Hal's mind, driving him to discover what happened to his sister. Was she hurt by her boyfriend, Pete, the surf god and brother of Hal's new girlfriend? Waves are the perfect metaphor for Hal's feelings of anger, fear, love, and grief. James Clamp helps listeners negotiate waves of turbulent emotions and shifts from past to present, place to place, and viewpoint to viewpoint. S.W. © AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169124767
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 03/13/2007
Edition description: Unabridged
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