She did understand. She understood as she never had before.
Okay, this book is seriously mindblowing and amazing. SO AMAZING. One of the best children's book (middle-school, or whatever you call it before kids start reading YA) that I have ever read. OMG.
Price, Ephraim, and Brynn Appledore's father has suffered a severe stroke. He's nonresponsive. He can't talk, he can't go to the bathroom by himself,... In desperation, the children's mother takes the three kids up to Maine with their dad in order to get treatment from a specialist. Where are they going to live? In the Water Castle, of course.
The Water Castle is a big ancestral Appledore home that their family inherited. Located in the tiny town of Crystal Springs, Maine, the Water Castle yields many surprises to the new young inhabitants. Secret passages, secret chambers, underground tunnels and secret hidden laboratories. For old Orlando Appledore was carrying out his ancestor Angus Appledore's quest: to discover the Fountain of Youth.
Everyone knows that the Appledore fortune came from selling "magical water" that allegedly cured all ills. But that was just a myth. Right?
Ephraim is determined that this new home is a new start for him. No longer is he going to be just "average" the way he was in Boston! But to his surprise and befuddlement, Crystal Springs is like the home of the gifted. The kids are smarter, stronger, faster. They grow up to be scientists, doctors, and Olympians. Ephraim is more "average" than ever - and he's miserable.
But when he befriends the girl he initially shunned as a "loser" - the only black girl in town, Mallory Green - and the boy he initially feared as a "thug" - the intimidating Will Wylie, from the "poor" side of town - they team up to make a scientific and adventuring force that can't be stopped.
...
Blakemore did an amazing job here with the set up and plot of her novel. By the time page 217 rolled around (63%) I was saying "OMG OMG" after turning every page, slammed by shocking revelations and stunning turns of events. Blakemore really grabs you and doesn't let go.
THE FIRST TRIO
We've got two "trios" of children, tied together by Ephraim. One trio is the Appledore siblings: Price, Ephraim and Brynn. Each are torn up and scared by their father's eerie, nonreponsive state and each are reacting in different ways. Price is an athlete: while trying not to worry he works out, does team sports, and steps up into the role of "man of the house" - a role that, at age 14/15, he is not yet able to fill. He's gruff with Ephraim, wanting him to stop acting like a child and become more adult.
Ephraim is dealing miserably with his father's illness. Shocked and angry when confronted with the reality that his dad might never be the same again, Ephraim lashes out in anger at everyone around him - for a good portion of the book he's a little shit! But we can see that he's hurting so much. He'd do anything - ANYTHING - if it meant making his father well again. Dum dum DUM!!!! <----ominous music
Brynn, the youngest, is only nine. She buries her head in books, lives in the house's huge library, and sometimes sneaks into her brother's rooms at night so she doesn't have to sleep alone. She's the most fragile of the three.
At the top of the stairs, two open doors revealed a library. Floor-to-ceiling shelves circled the room, filled edge to edge with books. There were two windows on the far wall, both covered with heavy velvet drapes that made the library dim and dreary as a monastery.
"I want this room," Brynn declared.
THE SECOND TRIO
The second trio Blakemore creates is the friendship between Ephraim, Mallory, and Will. Despite being three very different kids from very different backgrounds, when they finally learn to trust each other they form a unit that can't be stopped or contained.
Mallory is the only non-white in the whole school (she has a black mom and a white dad) - and her mom is a Darling. The Darlings have cared for the Appledore's estate - The Water Castle - for generations and generations and generations. Incredibly smart, combat-boot wearing, and fast-thinking Mallory has convinced herself she's just fine with being an outsider in Crystal Springs. Let them sneer! She's going to do her own thing. It hurts, though, when she extends a welcoming hand of friendship to Ephraim and he shoves it aside. Her dad - a mechanic and general handyman who can fix almost anything - and her mom - a woman filled with a wild desire to travel and wander - have separated, leaving Mallory bereft, sad and angry. Her mom feels "tied down" by her husband and child.
Mallory held her paper lunch bag in her fist as she made her way through the cafeteria to her normal table in the back. She sat so she could see everyone, which, her dad had told her, was something mobsters always did so they could avoid attacks from the back. Same for her.
We already know Ephraim and his issues.
Will Wylie's mom is dead and his dad is full of anger and bitterness. He's hated the Appledores - like all Wylies before him - and warns Will to stay away from the Appledores and their demon spawn. So when Will meets Ephraim for the first time, he hates him on principle - as he was raised to do. Only after getting to know Ephraim better does Will start to question his dad and his dad's legacy of hate. What is it based on? Why do the Appledores and the Wylies hate each other so deeply that it's spanned generations? Will is poor and from the "wrong side of the tracks," but he's brilliant at science and a star student in school. He hopes to get a scholarship to an Ivy League college and escape from Crystal Springs.
Even though generations of hatred and misunderstanding have separated these families for more than a century, it looks like these three kids are finally going to knot the already tangled families together in an even tighter way.
"Well, here's something I never thought I'd live to see. An Appledore, a Wylie, and a Darling walking into my bakery together."
...
A GLIMPSE INTO THE PAST
Every third or so chapter in the book is taken from the diary of young Nora Darling - former chambermaid and now apprentice scientist studying on the Appledore Estate under the great 97-year-old scientist Orlando Appledore. Appledore is using the last years of his life to hunt down and finally discover the Fountain of Youth that his ancestors have shed blood, sweat and tears trying to find. Will he find the secret before his time runs out?
People like Nikola Tesla, Michael Faraday, James Clark Maxwell, Robert Peary, Frederick Cook, Matthew Henson - either actually show up or are heavily discussed in this section. I learned a lot without even realizing I was learning. o.O
This section is amazing and gives us more of any idea about how the three families interacted in 1908 - 100 or so years ago.
As the tension mounts and mounts in the 2013 section of the book, it's also mounting for very different reasons in 1908.
...
Tl;dr - *Carmen is completely gobsmacked* This is AMAZING children's literature. You don't have to be a child to enjoy it! I love the way you have no idea where Blakemore is going with this until suddenly you do and it's like "OMG OMG OMG OMG!" Wow. Just stunning. Well-crafted, intricate, a revolutionary book on many levels, this is no one-trick pony. Whether you are reading it for the science, the myths, the mystery, the creepy old house, the friendship, the 'new kid in a new school' angle, the family drama, the generations of family hate - there's SO much to this book.
And the best part? It's not ever clunky or stupid or slow. Blakemore writes at a level middle schoolers will have no problem understanding - but at the same time NEVER talks down to them or preaches about anything. What a blessing! Just an awesome book for people of all ages to enjoy - with no agenda, no 'message' or anything hokey.
I can't say enough good things. I highly recommend this. Five stars.
He heard the humming - like a piano hitting one note and holding it for an impossibly long time. Below it was a sort of skittering noise. Ephraim was normally not the type of boy who investigated strange sounds in the night, but he figured if some sort of violence befell him, at least he wouldn't have to go to school the next day.
Not available in Spanish.