Review by Louella Moreland
The characters in Tracy Barrett's new
novel, "Cold in Summer," give us a fresh perspective on the people
from her native Tennessee. Life is a little slower, people a little
friendlier, populations a little smaller... but no barefoot
hillbillies who run around with shotguns.
Her leading character, Ariadne,
believes her life is ruined when her college professor mother takes
a visiting teaching post at a Tennessee college. Ariadne desperately
misses her best friend, Sarah, and is worried about starting school
in a small town where all the kids have known each other their whole
lives. She is certain the school will not be equipped with the
Internet or a modern science lab like her school back home.
Barrett begins her novel in the last
few days before school begins. Ariadne is picnicking with her family
at the manmade lake near their new home. Cedar Point Lake was
created after the war, when the dam was built to generate
electricity for the region. Ariadne learns that a small town lies
under the lake, and she develops a curiosity to learn more about the
people who lived "in the hollow" before the waters covered their
property.
As she explores the woods that surround
the lake, she meets a girl dressed in outdated clothes who seems
able to disappear into the bushes much too quickly. When Ariadne
begins to question the girls from town about this new friend, no one
seems to know a May Butler.
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May, of course, is a ghost. She once
lived in the hollow with her family but now wanders the woods around
the lake helping young people who need her friendship in some way.
However, her friendship with Ariadne takes a different course. This
time it is May who is asking for help and Ariadne who must solve the
riddle of May's disappearance.
By piecing together clues that May has
left with other residents of the small community, Ariadne believes
she can find May's skeleton and finally put her to rest. However, by
helping May, Ariadne also begins to help herself. She comes to
understand that this new community can be a good place. She learns
she does not have to forsake her old friendships when making new
ones.
This is a very well-written ghost story
for young readers. The characters are believable: parents who are
caring but a little preoccupied with jobs and moving; a little
brother who is a pain in the neck but is also someone who can be
counted on in time of need; friends who do not always know how to
reach out with true emotions. The ghost is not too spooky or
mystical. As readers, we cannot help but like the rather sad but
resourceful May. The use of the supernatural in the story flows
seamlessly in and out of the plot.
Readers will close this book with a
sense of leaving behind a group a people who could be good friends.
Cedar Point Lake becomes a place we would like to visit on vacation.
What a great read for the pre-Halloween season!
For more
spine-chilling adventures, visit us at the Lincoln Public Library,
725 Pekin St.
[Louella Moreland, youth
services librarian,
Lincoln
Public Library District] |