Publisher's Hardcover ©2018 | -- |
A Jamaican boy and his family are caught on the cusp of change.Lloyd Saunders, a young brown-skinned Jamaican boy, keeps counting the days until his fisherman grandfather, Maas Conrad, returns from Pedro Bank. His father occasionally comes around with a few dollar bills, fists, and the smell of rum. His mother sells Conrad's catch to the well-to-do by the nearby Liguanea supermarket and has no time to worry about the old man. Only Conrad talks to Lloyd and teaches him about the sea, life, and times gone by. As each day passes he wonders what has happened to the old fisherman. Determined to find his grandfather, Lloyd sets out asking around Kingston, enlisting his buddy Dwight to help solve the mystery. Although Lloyd has faith, each day erodes the belief of everyone around him. When he learns that his grandfather may have been involved in dolphin hunting, Lloyd realizes sinister forces threaten Conrad and his family. The characters' lilting patois guides readers into a changing Jamaica rich with lessons bobbing just below the surface. The quiet, deliberate third-person narration is interspersed with the thoughts of Conrad, whose personal history of Jamaica gently anticipates Lloyd's journey. The relationships between boy and elder, man and sea, crime and poverty all lift McCaulay's first children's novel into a different league.A boy's home is a place in the heart of one whose heart makes a place for him. Beautiful. (Fiction. 8-12)
ALA Booklist (Thu Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2018)Twelve-year-old Lloyd Saunders, who lives with his mother near Kingston, Jamaica, worries that his grandfather has "gone to drift" when he doesn't return from a fishing trip. No one seems interested in searching, so Lloyd investigates on his own, stowing away on a coast guard ship and interviewing some of Gramps' friends. As he zeroes in on where Gramps may have gone, Lloyd also learns about the fishing industry's secrets: consistently poor catches sometimes drive desperate, hungry men to capture dolphins, a lucrative but illegal trade. Told in parallel narratives by Lloyd and Gramps, this tale draws readers in as McCaulay gradually reveals what drove Gramps to the dangerous Pedro Bank on that fateful day. While the Jamaican patois might initally take some getting used to, it quickly becomes routine and adds to the book's authenticity. This makes a good choice for adventure fans, the eco-conscious, and those hoping to understand the economic hardships faced by those who make their living from the sea.
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)A Jamaican boy and his family are caught on the cusp of change.Lloyd Saunders, a young brown-skinned Jamaican boy, keeps counting the days until his fisherman grandfather, Maas Conrad, returns from Pedro Bank. His father occasionally comes around with a few dollar bills, fists, and the smell of rum. His mother sells Conrad's catch to the well-to-do by the nearby Liguanea supermarket and has no time to worry about the old man. Only Conrad talks to Lloyd and teaches him about the sea, life, and times gone by. As each day passes he wonders what has happened to the old fisherman. Determined to find his grandfather, Lloyd sets out asking around Kingston, enlisting his buddy Dwight to help solve the mystery. Although Lloyd has faith, each day erodes the belief of everyone around him. When he learns that his grandfather may have been involved in dolphin hunting, Lloyd realizes sinister forces threaten Conrad and his family. The characters' lilting patois guides readers into a changing Jamaica rich with lessons bobbing just below the surface. The quiet, deliberate third-person narration is interspersed with the thoughts of Conrad, whose personal history of Jamaica gently anticipates Lloyd's journey. The relationships between boy and elder, man and sea, crime and poverty all lift McCaulay's first children's novel into a different league.A boy's home is a place in the heart of one whose heart makes a place for him. Beautiful. (Fiction. 8-12)
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
ALA Booklist (Thu Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2018)
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
From award-winning Jamaican author Diana McCaulay, Gone to Drift is a powerful voice-driven middle grade novel about family set in Jamaica.
Lloyd comes from a long line of fishermen. Growing up in Kingston, Jamaica, Lloyd feels most at home with the sea and his grandfather, Maas Conrad, at his side.
When his grandfather doesn’t return from a fishing trip, Lloyd fears he has gone to drift. The sea may be in Lloyd’s blood, but as he searches for his grandfather, he discovers a side of the ocean—and the people who use it—that he’s never known before.
Told in the alternating voices of Lloyd and Maas Conrad, Gone to Drift is a moving story of family, courage, and the wonders of the oceans we call home.