The secrecy and double life of this teenager in a foreign land is paralleled by the mysterious comings and goings of her beloved but distant father. Guyana is nationalizing Canada’s bauxite mines, and Indonesians are slaughtering East Timorese a few miles away. Why is their phone tapped, why do they always have to have a suitcase packed, and why is her father working on a water project on a parched island? In The Water Here Is Never Blue, an adolescent comes of age and is indelibly marked by her years abroad. But it is the adult narrator who ultimately struggles with the truth of who her father was.
Hardcover, 304 pages
Published
August 20th 2013
by Viking Canada
Genre: Memoir/non fiction/ travel
Kristine's Review:
What did I think of this book? Interesting might be a good word but I'm unsure if that says enough. Plunkett has an amazing and powerfully descriptive way with words that makes you feel like you are there. In the way she describes both Guyana and Indonesia I could vividly see and feel the things she was writing about.
Plunkett's teenage years were definitely unique and I enjoyed reading about what she experienced and how she adapted in these two places that were relatively unknown at the time. I found that her thought process at that age was quite mature but perhaps that could be because of her adult perspective as the narrator. It is most definitely a coming of age story.
I enjoy reading about different places and not knowing much about Guyana and Indonesia made it all that more interesting. Having said that, this book is not for everyone. If you do not enjoy memoirs this is not the book for you. As much as I did enjoy this book I did struggle a tiny bit getting into it. In my opinion you are better off to skip the prologue because it highlights some of the things that are told in the story and makes you feel like you are reading it twice. On the other hand I very much enjoyed the epilogue where she talks about what has happened in these two places since the time she lived there and reflects back on her beloved father.
As the only blond haired, blue eyed girl (along with her sister) in two very different countries makes for a very different teenage experience and a very unique read!
About the author
twitter- @shelaghplunkett
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