FICTION

The Weight of Water

212p. glossary. Bloomsbury. July 2013. Tr $16.99. ISBN 978-1-59990-967-7.
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Gr 6–9—Kasienka and her mother have left their home in Poland to find the father and husband who left them a few years before. They arrive in the UK with some meager possessions and only a vague notion of where to find a man who may not wish to be found. Kasienka feels "all wrong," a feeling that only gets worse when she finds herself in the crosshairs of one of her school's alpha girls. On top of the bullying, she must travel door to door each night acting as her mother's voice in a demeaning search for her father. Kasienka tells her tale through graceful, effortless verse that succinctly captures the immigrant experience in a way that anyone who has ever felt left out could easily embrace. This is a sweet, well-paced tale not without a silver lining; Kasienka finds happiness and the stirrings of first love in an unexpected place-the swimming pool. Those who have wished for an older version of Carolyn Marsden's The Gold-Threaded Dress (Candlewick, 2002) or Eleanor Estes's The Hundred Dresses (Harcourt, 1944) need look no further. The Weight of Water will more than fill the hole.—Jill Heritage Maza, Montclair Kimberley Academy, Montclair, NJ
In this contemporary immigration story told in verse, almost-thirteen-year-old Kasienka and her mother move from their home in Gdansk, Poland, to Coventry, England, in search of Kasienka's father, who walked out on them two years before. At night, they go knocking on doors, looking for Tata, while during the day Kasienka is miserably lonely at school in a class with eleven-year-olds: "I thought, maybe, I'd be exotic, / Like a red squirrel among the gray, / Like an English girl would be in Gdansk. / But I am not an English girl in Gdansk. / I'm a Pole in Coventry. / And that is not the same thing / At all." Once she finally moves up to the next grade, she makes two friends: Clair, a popular girl who quickly turns on her, and William, who becomes her first boyfriend. The free-verse narrative presents Kasienka's feelings with economical precision, reflecting her distress but also her resilient nature as she endures bullying, delights in the physical sensations of kissing William, and finally finds her father and accepts his new life. The book realistically depicts modern-day middle school dynamics for an outsider of any kind, and Kasienka solves her own problems gradually: "William is in eighth grade. / He could save me from the pack. / But he does not want to: / He knows / I can save / Myself." susan dove lempke

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