Tempest Maguire is a half-mermaid. She lives with her father and younger brothers, since her mother went returned to the sea some years ago. She has been living a normal human, middle-class life, with friends, school, boyfriend and surfing.
But now her seventeenth birthday is approaching. Despite a letter from her mother telling her that she will be able to choose, when the time comes, whether to stay on land or become a mermaid, she is suddenly sprouting gills and has – temporarily, anyway – grown a tail while in the middle of surfing.
Then there’s the evil sea-witch, Tiamat, who is after her for reasons connected with a prophecy and a hunky surfer, Kona, who is more than he seems.
How do you go on with your normal teenage life when all this is happening?
This paranormal romance has the elements that girls look for in this sort of fiction – a heroine with supernatural gifts, a romantic triangle with two gorgeous boys, both crazy for her, one of them a supernatural being – we’ve had fallen angels and angst-ridden vampires and werewolves, why not a sea-creature? – a prophecy concerning the heroine and a villain who wants to use her gifts to get power.
The author has played with elements from different mythologies/folklores. Tiamat is the name of a Babylonian creatrix-goddess connected with the sea and selkies, the seal-people, properly belong to Celtic folklore but appear Hawaiian in this novel and seem to live in the tropics. It would have been nice if there had been some acknowledgement of this at the end, which might have sent young readers to look it up.
Although it can be read standalone, there are elements towards the end which suggest a sequel to come. The girls at my school will almost certainly be nagging me for it when the time comes.
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By: Sue Bursztynski,
on 8/20/2011
Blog: Ypulse (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: tracy deebs, tempest rising, what happened to goodbye, between here and forever, city of the fallen angels, georgina bloomberg, the a circuit, Teens, Forever, sarah dessen, elizabeth scott, summer reading, cassandra clare, maggie stiefvater, Books & Print, catherine hapka, Add a tag
By: Anastasia Goodstein,
on 7/6/2011
Blog: I Just Wanna Sit Here And Read! (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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By: Kate,
on 5/9/2011
Hi, Kate, thanks so much for having me today ☺ I’ve written a lot of books in the last few years (seventeen, I think, now) and one of the things that I’ve learned is that each book has its own playlist. While there are some songs that I love and that I listen to no matter what book I’m writing, after a little while, I usually find myself playing the same group of songs over and over again. For Tempest, those songs were:
Dirty Little Secret—The All-American Rejects
Fader—The Temper Trap
Crash Into Me—The Dave Matthews Band
Soul to Squeeze—Red Hot Chili Peppers
Please Don’t Leave Me—Pink
Secrets—One Republic
Don’t Speak—No Doubt
Kings and Queens—30 Seconds to Mars
Something Beautiful—Need to Breathe
I Can’t Stay—The Killers
I Will Follow You Into the Dark—Death Cab for Cutie
How about you? What songs are you listening to again and again these days?
____________________________________________
Thanks Tracy for stopping by!!
Check out Tracy and other authors at the Chills and Thrills Teen Book Tour HERE.
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2 Comments on TEMPEST RISING By Tracy Deebs. London: Bloomsbury, 2011, last added: 8/20/2011
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Blog: Ypulse (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: tracy deebs, tempest rising, what happened to goodbye, between here and forever, city of the fallen angels, georgina bloomberg, the a circuit, Teens, Forever, sarah dessen, elizabeth scott, summer reading, cassandra clare, maggie stiefvater, Books & Print, catherine hapka, Add a tag
With summer days off from school, it’s the perfect time for students to unwind with a good book. Whether they want to dive into a serious series or just have a little light-hearted fun with a “guilty pleasure” book, Youth Advisory... Read the rest of this post
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Today I am very happy to have Tracy Deebs, author of Tempest Rising, on the blog today to talk about her playlist for her book.
Hi, Kate, thanks so much for having me today ☺ I’ve written a lot of books in the last few years (seventeen, I think, now) and one of the things that I’ve learned is that each book has its own playlist. While there are some songs that I love and that I listen to no matter what book I’m writing, after a little while, I usually find myself playing the same group of songs over and over again. For Tempest, those songs were:
Fader—The Temper Trap
Crash Into Me—The Dave Matthews Band
Soul to Squeeze—Red Hot Chili Peppers
Please Don’t Leave Me—Pink
Secrets—One Republic
Don’t Speak—No Doubt
Kings and Queens—30 Seconds to Mars
Something Beautiful—Need to Breathe
I Can’t Stay—The Killers
I Will Follow You Into the Dark—Death Cab for Cutie
How about you? What songs are you listening to again and again these days?
Thanks Tracy for stopping by!!
Check out Tracy and other authors at the Chills and Thrills Teen Book Tour HERE.
From Goodreads. Tempest Maguire wants nothing more than to surf the killer waves near her California home; continue her steady relationship with her boyfriend, Mark; and take care of her brothers and surfer dad.
But Tempest is half mermaid, and as her seventeenth birthday approaches, she will have to decide whether to remain on land or give herself to the ocean like her mother. The pull of the water becomes as insistent as her attraction to Kai, a gorgeous surfer whose uncanny abilities hint at an otherworldly identity as well. And when Tempest does finally give in to the water's temptation and enters a fantastical underwater world, she finds that a larger destiny awaits her—and that the entire ocean's future hangs in the balance.
0 Comments on Blog Tour: Tempest Rising by Tracy Deebs (Playlist) as of 1/1/1900
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Sounds like a fun read - but I do think it's a shame when authors don't acknowledge their folkloric sources.
Personally, I don't think the main readers for this book will notice or care, but if acknowledgement is there, they do look up things. One of my students, for example, asked me to get in a copy of the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius because a novel she was reading had a philosophy theme and mentioned it. It was a strange request, but I bought the book, which wasn't expensive and at least served her curiosity. And you never know when someone else will read that novel and ask. Something like this - selkies and Tiamat - would pop up on the Internet with no problems. Ah, well.