A young woman, betrayed by the boy she loves, wrestles with the aftermath in this haunting tale.
Margaret Moore has attended Marshall Summer Naval School in the Great Lakes region for years, forming close friendships with three other girls there—outspoken Rose and Nisreen and Flor, who are a couple. Their long-lasting bonds have allowed them to truly be themselves around one another. However, Margaret has hidden from them her relationship with a boy, and from this omission springs a complicated, heavily atmospheric story of tragedy, secrets, and loyalty that moves through time, ranging from the 1950s to the present day and weaving in and out of realism. Told in three parts—Naiad, Subimago, and Imago, alluding to the growth cycle of the mayflies so prevalent in the camp’s remote, wooded, lake location—Margaret’s story is both heartbreaking and enraging; the particulars of power, status, and patriarchy that are at play are all too familiar, and their impact on Margaret’s life will be deeply felt. An eerie, almost dreamy lyricism resonates throughout, and repeated phrases lend a fairy-tale–like feel to this novel that is further segmented by frequent subheadings. Readers with an appreciation for the psychologically dark will enjoy the lushly developed sense of foreboding even as the twisting and turning plot is at times elusive. Margaret and Rose read as White; Nisreen is from Jordan, and Flor is from Venezuela.
A fierce, chilling, winding mystery.
(Paranormal thriller. 14-18)