Copyright Date:
2011
Edition Date:
2011
Release Date:
03/01/11
Pages:
328 pages
ISBN:
Publisher: 0-439-78311-9 Perma-Bound: 0-605-48894-0
ISBN 13:
Publisher: 978-0-439-78311-8 Perma-Bound: 978-0-605-48894-6
Dewey:
Fic
LCCN:
2010026535
Dimensions:
21 cm.
Language:
English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist
(Sun May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2011)
In 1899, 15-year-old May learns that she is kin to neither the sour hypochondriac she has called "Mother" nor the stalwart lighthouse keeper she still loves as a father. But the mystery of her birth pales beside the experience of falling in love and the discovery that she can become a mermaid simply by diving into the sea. As she struggles to reconcile her familiar obligations at home with her newfound experiences, May finds her world shifting again when her sister Hannah, the protagonist of the first Daughters of the Sea novel, appears on the scene. Elements of mystery, romance, fantasy, and drama (occasionally bordering on melodrama) combine in a mesmerizing tale with a well-realized Maine setting. At the novel's end, Hannah's story intertwines with May's and promises another sister and still more revelations to come in future series volumes. The moonlit scene on the jacket emphasizes the novel's romantic side.
Horn Book
(Mon Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2011)
Fifteen-year-old May's parents keep her holed up in their lighthouse, adamant that she stay away from the sea. On a clandestine swim, May discovers that she is a mermaid. May accepts this new identity, but a love interest, an aggressive fisherman, and a long-lost sister complicate her life. May's longing is palpable, and the turn-of-the-twentieth-century Maine island setting is evocative.
Word Count:
53,576
Reading Level:
5.2
Interest Level:
5-9
Accelerated Reader:
reading level: 5.2
/ points: 8.0
/ quiz: 142637
/ grade: Middle Grades
Reading Counts!:
reading level:4.7 /
points:14.0 /
quiz:Q52531
Lexile:
770L
Guided Reading Level:
X
From Daughters of the SeaMay took a deep breath, her last from the old world, and dove.
The colorful underwater tapestry was even more brilliant than she had imagined. The seaweed which, at low tide, lay on the rocks in ugly, tangled clumps, streamed like banners of amber lightning through the deep water.
Her bursts of speed amazed her. She gave a powerful kick and found herself racing to the surface, breaking through it in a high, arcing leap. The moon and the stars that had quivered in the sea now seemed rock solid and anchored to the sky. There was a slight tingling that seemed to radiate just beneath her skin and she realized that her legs had become a tail—glistening and beautiful.
Snow had started to fall, big fluffy flakes descending quietly from the dark bowl of the starry night. May was surprised to find that she did not feel the cold. The irksome variations in temperature that, on land, would make her run for a shawl, or don a chaffing high collared dress in the heat of summer, no longer affected her. For all those years, she had been but a clumsy visitor on land. This was her real home.
She swam until the last star faded into the dawn. The sea was still and, as May watched the sunrise, her exhilaration began to be replaced by a sense of loss. She had left the world Hugh Fitzsimmons knew and entered one he could never imagine. She swam slowly back toward land.
Excerpted from May by Kathryn Lasky
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
Book 2 in Kathryn Lasky's shimmering quartet about mermaid sisters and supernatural love.
May feels her life drying up. The sea calls to her, but her parents forbid her from swimming. She longs for books, but her mother finds her passion for learning strange. She yearns for independence, but a persistent suitor, Rudd, wants to tame her spirited ways. Yet after her fifteenth birthday, the urge to break free becomes overpowering and May makes a life-changing discovery. She does not belong on land where girls are meant to be obedient. She is a mermaid-a creature of the sea.
For the first time, May learns what freedom feels like-the thrill of exploring both the vast ocean and the previously forbidden books. She even catches the eye of Hugh, an astronomy student who, unlike the townspeople, finds May anything but strange. But not everyone is pleased with May's transformation. Rudd decides that if can't have May, no one will. He knows how to destroy her happiness and goes to drastic measures to ensure that May loses everything: her freedom and the only boy she's ever loved.