E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus
Graciela wants to go on a picnic to celebrate her 13th birthday a long time ago, but doesn't listen to her sister Letitcia and is swept off a cliff into the ocean and drowns. There, she is awakened by Amina, who offers to be her guide. Many people who die watery deaths are living there, serving a variety of purposes, from mind erasers, to shell musicians, to glaziers. Graciela is a glazier, and grinds bottles into sea glass. She is very fond of Amina and worried that Amina will leave her and she will be all alone. We also meet Jorge, who lives about a hundred years later, whose father works as a blacksmith. His parents are very mean, and when Jorge finds an old harpoon and tries without any luck to destroy it after learning a bit of its story from Ernesto, whose family was ruined by the harpoon after they tried to catch a sea spirit with it. Jorge's family lets him drift off to sea in a boat, hoping he dies, after he takes the harpoon. Throwing the weapon overboard, he accidentally wounds Amina. He dies, and ends up in Graciela's world. Amina does recover, and the three try to destroy the weapon in the abyss. They are successful, but there is a price. We see Jorge at the end of his life, and learn that he was the only one to survive the Great Eruption, and once he dies, he goes to be with Graciela. The story has beautiful but somewhat creepy illustrations.
This is the type of lyrical, heartprint book, like Eggers' The Eyes and the Impossible, that will win the Newbery and be beloved by teachers and librarians. It does have creepy moments, but not the sort of ones that my students ask for. It has a fairy tale feel to it, and a lot more philosophy than action. I'd read it before adding it to a school library, to see if it would do well with your students.