I have owned this book for many years and have read it a few times. Recently, with that manta ray in the news for allowing divers to remove a hook near its eye, I decided to re-read, so here we are.
Paloma is fourteen and lives on an island in the Sea Of Cortez, between Mexico and Baja California. Her father is dead now, but he taught her everything he knew about the sea, about fishing, diving, and respect for Nature.
The trouble is, Paloma's brother Jo should have been the one learning Dad's secrets, not his younger sister. Even though he knows that he simply was not interested, Jo has become twisted emotionally because of the way a mere girl has been allowed to become who she is.
And this is the main conflict in the story. What will Jo do to ease his own pain? What will Paloma do to protect herself and her beloved ocean? How does the manta ray fit into all of this?
Paloma could easily represent the people who love, respect and try to understand nature on its own terms, while Jo represents Modern Man who thinks only of what he can take from the world around him.
I enjoyed the story, as I have before, but I did notice a few points this time around that I must have not paid attention to during other readings.
For one thing, I was distracted by how many times the author worked scientific information into the story, having Paloma recall things her father taught her about how the Sea was created, a great deal about the mechanics of deep sea free-diving, and a few other such topics. While it helped to understand these things, I felt during this reading that they interrupted the flow of the story.
Because of all those technical details popping up, I could not lose myself enough to allow belief that the dramatic events involving the manta ray at the en of the book could happen even in such a semi-fantasy type tale as this.
But the message for humanity is clear, and the basic story is interesting and sometimes quite lovely.
Oh, and the cover to my edition is stunning!