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Selkie Girl [Hardcover]

Laurie Brooks (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 14, 2008
ELIN JEAN HAS always known she was different from the others on their remote island home. She is a gentle soul, and can’t stand the annual tradition of killing seal babies to thin the population. Even Tam McCodron, the gypsy boy to whom she is strangely drawn, seems to belong more than she does.

It’s just a matter of time until Elin Jean discovers the secret of her past: her mother, Margaret, is a selkie, held captive by her smitten father, who has kept Margaret’s precious seal pelt hostage for 16 years. Soon Elin Jean faces a choice about whether to free her mother from her island prison. And, as the child of this unusual union, she must make another decision. Part land, part sea, she must explore both worlds and dig deep inside herself to figure out where she belongs, and where her future lies.

Poignant, meaningful, and romantic, Selkie Girl is a lyrical debut about a mesmerizing legend.

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 6–9—An extraordinary, beautifully written tale about belonging, love, and the laws of nature. Sixteen-year-old Elin Jean lives in the Orkney Islands north of Scotland and is magnetically drawn to the sea. She knows she is different because of the webbing between her fingers that regenerates if it is cut. Though her father loves her mother, their relationship is tarnished by a mysterious underlying discord. He is determined to make Elin a normal girl by repeatedly cutting the webbing while her mother desperately tries to shield her from pain. Her compassionate grandfather pushes her to discover the truth for herself. Elin is attracted to Tam, a Gypsy boy in town. Her physical strangeness and his heritage set them apart from those around them, but perhaps this helps bring them together. By chance, Elin finds a seal skin hidden above a door in her house and learns the truth about her origins. The discovery is simultaneously freeing and burdensome. Brooks's rich prose reverberates with vivid, cinematic images. The author succeeds in conveying the fully fleshed-out characters' anguish and conflict. This marvelous offering brings to mind Alice Hoffman's Indigo (2002) and Karen Hesse's The Music of Dolphins (1996, both Scholastic). It's not to be missed.—Renee Steinberg, formerly at Fieldstone Middle School, Montvale, NJ
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Although the flowery pink-and-turquoise cover art suggests a sweet, girly mermaid story, Brooks’ brooding, romantic tale of a shape-shifting seal-girl is drawn straight from Celtic folklore. Her mother is a selkie (a seal/human shape-shifter), her father is human, but Elin Jean belongs nowhere. Her misshapen hands and webbed fingers mark her as a freak in her small island village, and her efforts to prevent the annual culling of seal pups enrage local fishermen. Her only defender is another outcast, Tam, the son of a gypsy peddler. But when Elin Jean finds her mother’s seal skin and follows her into the sea, she finds she is a freak in the selkie world, too. Is Elin Jean the girl-seal of selkie prophecy destined to change their world forever? Brooks’ coming-of-age story is full of secrets, teenage angst, fierce longing to belong, dramatic rescues, revenge, and true love. Her tone mimics traditional lore: appropriately dark, moody, and satisfyingly old-fashioned. Suggest this to girls who enjoyed Berlie Doherty’s Daughter of the Sea (1997), a selkie story for younger readers. Grades 6-9. --Chris Sherman

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 12 and up
  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf Books for Young Readers; First Edition edition (October 14, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375851704
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375851704
  • Product Dimensions: 5.8 x 1 x 8.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,232,203 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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4 star:
 (3)
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very unique, February 23, 2010
This review is from: Selkie Girl (Hardcover)
Selkie Girl is a story set in Shapinsay Island which is one of the Orkney Islands off the north coast of mainland Scotland. This story is inspired by Selkie legends where a Selkie is a creature that is half human and half Seal.

Elin Jean has always felt like an outcast in her village. She has fingers which are connected by thin webs that make her the object of ridicule in the village. She spends most of her time in isolation seeking solace from the Ocean. She lives with her parents and her grandfather. But no one has ever been open to her about why she is so different from the others.

She would come to know in time, yes, but it will change her life, turn it upside down and will lead her on a journey into the unknown. She will have to find a purpose and a place to belong.

Selkie Girl is a magical book. The setting is beautiful and mythical. Laurie Brooks writing creates an imagery so vivid that you can feel and imagine the vastness of the ocean, the horror of the seals fate, the beauty of the land and Elin Jean's struggle to belong either on land or in the sea. The author has taken the Selkie legend and turned it into something else.

I could give you one example of the beautiful writing here:

"Here is a roaring power to be reckoned with, this channel where the North Sea meets the mighty Atlantic. At odds with each other, the two bodies collide, churning into waves that can rise to forty feet. As change-able as the weather that reigns over it, the channel rests, mild as a newborn lamb, until the wind shifts it into raging tides that can catch the most experienced sailor unawares. And in a storm, the waves stretch as tall as mountains, white peaks battling for domain over the waterway. Even the thought of these storms humbles the others. What the sea gives up, it must take away, they say. And the truth of those words is born of bitter experience. Each year families lose fishermen to the sea, gobbles up in the wild storms, bodies lost forever beneath the tides."

And although the writing is beautiful, it can be a bit too wordy at times.

"Grandpa blows rings of smoke, one inside the next. He sends the ovals toward the ceiling, and they follow willingly until they collide with the lingering haze from the cooking fire above and their perfect circles distort and disappear."

The first half was a bit slow for me but I raced through the second half not wanting to finish the book but also wanting to know what happens. Again a Young Adult book that can easily be a crossover.

Having said the above, I believe I have reasons for loving this book more than I expect others to. I LOVE the ocean and that's probably why I could understand the endless pages describing Elin Jean's pull to the ocean, her reasons being different than mine though. I love books set in lush, green surroundings, if it's an island it's a plus, if the island is in Scotland or Ireland, even better. And finally, I love books based on legends, myths or fairy tales. All I want to say is that these are also some of the factors that have lead me to like this book. That's all.

P.S: I kind of hate the cover.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Exquistly Done, December 23, 2010
By 
Flying Books (The Secret Library) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Selkie Girl (Paperback)
I found this book fascinating and intriguing. The language is beautiful, the story, while not unique, definitely has its own flavor, and the romance....is out of place.

Honestly, I loved every part where Tam did not appear. However, Elin Jean's relationship with him seems forced and contrived, and strikes me as 'stupid teenage love'. It's not real. It won't last. It has no cause.

On the other hand, Tam provides Elin Jean with a connection to her human side. That seems to be the entire purpose of his presence. So, while the book is definitely worth reading, one could stop after Elin Jean returns to care for her father and not feel like anything's been left out.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars I wish I could give Selkie Girl by Laurie Brooks 4.5 stars! 4 is too low!!!, March 30, 2010
This review is from: Selkie Girl (Hardcover)
First I'm amazed there are only two reviews for this book.

Second I'm amazed one is positive and one is negative.

In my opinion this novel, a young adult book, was fantastic and thoroughly enjoyed by this 41 year old. The first two reviewers of this book have already given the premise of the story, so I feel the most important thing I need to say is this book is a must read for all ages.

This book is about the main character - Elin Jean not only being accepted for who she is but finding out from who she wants to receive this acceptance from. It is about Elin Jean giving love and figuring out who she wants to receive it from. The book teaches a lesson in finding ones purpose in life. It is never preachy however.

The novel itself is relatively short and is an easy and enjoyable read. I feel the book is as beautifully written as the cover is designed. I long to read Laurie Brooks next book should she decide to go this route.

I recommend this book to all! I know I'll be rereading it again.
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