One of my now-adult kids was telling me about this; she read it when she was growing up. She said it was an epistolary-and-document story, and I love those, so I got it out.
So good! Very cute, fun presentation--lots of different ways messages and information are passed along (memos, letters, faxes, newspaper stories--even menus and floral receipts), and a story that touches on water rights, corporate greed, and hidden history, but all done in a very lighthearted fashion. All the names are water related, Florence Waters, Walter Russ (called "Wally" by the aforementioned Florence--get it? Wally Russ?), Sally Mander and so forth. Since I like salamanders and eels, I was sad that Sally Mander and Dee Eel were the bad guys, but I can be philosophical about it.
I'm wondering if this story is taught in elementary schools--I'm wondering because the copy I borrowed had lots of penciled underlining and notes in a young person's hand. These were cute: "Dig Dirt Ms. Waters" on the page where Dee Eel is suggesting to Sally Mander that they find dirt on Florence Waters (the unstoppable force who changes lives for the better in Dry Creek, MO), and "Cause Effect" on a letter from the fifth-grade class to Florence, in which they tell her that their town changed its name from Spring Creek to Dry Creek when the creek mysteriously dried up, thirty years ago.
Anyway, a lot of fun!