Needle Lake
A Novel
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- 89,00 kr
Publisher Description
Two cousins on very different sides of teen girlhood spend a winter together that changes both of their lives forever.
“A searing, unforgettable novel that captures the intense and dangerous alchemy of girlhood.”—Chelsea Bieker, author of Madwoman
And once, after Elna came to stay, I watched a man drown there on Christmas Eve, his body trapped beneath the ice.
Fourteen-year-old Ida was born with a hole in her heart. Forbidden from most physical activities and considered strange by her teachers and peers, she prefers spending time alone, memorizing countries and capitals on her globe and imagining the world outside the tiny logging town of Mineral, Washington.
One afternoon, in walks her cousin Elna, there to stay for a few weeks. Ida hasn’t seen Elna since they were children, and she’s immediately drawn to her older cousin, who’s everything Ida is not: confident, glamorous, charismatic, and daring. Elna lives in San Francisco, a city Ida has seen only as a dot on her globe. She doesn’t treat Ida like she’s a fragile kid whose heart might give out at any moment. She isn’t scared off by Ida’s quirks and fixations. Ida is enraptured.
Then, on Christmas Eve, a man dies out in the woods near Mineral, and the two cousins suddenly share a secret beyond the scope of anything Ida has dealt with before. Fear begins to mix with the reverence Ida feels toward her cousin, especially when she discovers Elna is hiding more than she ever suspected. Brimming with lush prose and careful observation, Needle Lake is an arresting portrait of girlhood and the overwhelming, sometimes dangerous intensity of adolescence.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The sharply observed sophomore effort by Champine (Knife River) examines the double-edged bond between two teen girls. Ida, the neurodivergent 14-year-old narrator, spends most of her free time helping her mother at the family's convenience store in their fading logging town of Mineral, Wash. At school, she's regularly bullied by her classmates. After her guidance counselor calls her a "square peg," she's overcome by a "sick feeling... of having done something wrong, and everyone could understand what it was but me." Her perspective shifts when her 16-year-old cousin, Elna, arrives from San Francisco for an extended stay. Elna turns out to be a hustler, earning money by mending clothes for the loggers. Ida envies the pretty older girl's free spirit ("Like there was a formula my cousin had cracked that made the world, and the people in it, easy for her to navigate"). When Elna gives Ida a butterfly charm, Ida feels "a surge of belonging so powerful I thought my heart might explode." But Elna's charisma belies a dark side, and her magical effect on Ida evaporates during their confrontation with a logger, which turns violent after he catches them stealing from him. In Ida, Champine has crafted a singular perspective, and the plot builds to a surprising twist. This satisfies.