The cadence and imagery of poetry illuminate a journey through grief and fear to healing and self-discovery.
In her second verse novel, Fritz uses narrative free verse and the imagery of oceans and lighthouses in rhythmic poetry to tell the story of Claire Sloan, a 13-year-old who navigates an awakening sense of self along with the shock of witnessing her mother suffer a serious medical event. The poems, told in Claire’s first-person narration, are divided into three parts that build on one another like successive waves. In “Low Tide,” readers learn about Claire’s family’s summer vacation in Maine and the sudden onset of her mom’s ruptured brain aneurysm. Claire brings readers with her through her mom’s time in the hospital and her fears about what it might mean if she doesn’t survive. In “Midtide,” poems narrate Claire’s return home to Pennsylvania, where she enters eighth grade, swims in the churning waters of young adolescence, and explores her grief. In “High Tide,” Claire’s mom returns home from rehab; the poems evoke the entire family’s healing journey, including Claire’s discovery of how to best express her own burgeoning hope and understanding. The author’s note describes Fritz’s personal experiences with two brain aneurysm ruptures. The strong pace and interesting subject matter make this work broadly compelling and accessible. The Sloans are white; Claire has good friends who are Black and Latine.
A compulsively readable account of a young teen’s journey toward hope.
(Verse fiction. 9-14)