The Girl Who Stopped Swimming is Joshilyn Jackson's third novel.
After finishing this one at breakneck speed, I'll be hunting down
the first two.
Laurel has escaped her childhood and the family history in poverty
stricken DeLop, Alabama. She's married to David, has a daughter
Shelby and lives a comfortable life in a gated community. The
ghosts have stopped following her. Until one night, when she sees
the ghost of a young girl beckoning to her. She looks out the
window and there is the dead girl - in her pool.
Although they disagree strongly on many, many things, she calls on
her actress sister Thalia to come and help her deal with this. As
the sisters 'investigate', the past comes charging up behind them.
Secrets long buried won't be kept quiet any longer.
This is an absolute gem of a novel. Jackson's prose are captivating
and unsettling at the same time.
"But her house did not feel normal. It was silent and too large
around her, as if it had been hollowed out. The wrongness in her
yard had it's nose pressed against her glass doors, and she felt
something small and feral scrabbling in her belly. Every time she
thought she'd lose herself in her work, the something would run one
spiky tooth along her stomach lining."
The story is addicting. Can she really see ghosts? Hints of the
past are eked out and I was reading as quickly as I could to piece
it altogether. It's a mystery, but also a study in families and
relationships and how the past affects the present.
In the reading group guide and notes, the author notes that "at
it's heart, this book is about poverty". I found this quite
interesting. As well as the literal translation of fiscal poverty,
emotional poverty plays a key role.
This was a fantastic read for me.