“If
I’d blinked, I would have missed it. But I didn’t, and I saw something
fall from the rear deck of the opposite ferry: a small, wide-eyed human
face, in one tiny frozen moment, as it plummeted toward the water.”
When
she witnesses a small child tumbling from a ferry into Lake Champlain,
Troy Chance dives in without thinking. Harrowing moments later, she bobs
to the surface, pulling a terrified little boy with her. As the ferry
disappears into the distance, she begins a bone-chilling swim nearly a
mile to shore with a tiny passenger on her back.
Surprisingly, he speaks only French. He’ll acknowledge that his name is Paul; otherwise, he’s resolutely mute.
Troy assumes that Paul’s frantic parents will be in touch with the
police or the press. But what follows is a shocking and deafening
silence. And Troy, a freelance writer, finds herself as fiercely
determined to protect Paul as she is to find out what happened to him.
What she uncovers will take her into a world of wealth and privilege and
heedless self-indulgence—a world in which the murder of a child is not
unthinkable. She’ll need skill and courage to survive and protect her
charge and herself.
Sara J. Henry’s powerful and compelling
Learning to Swim will move and disturb readers right up to its
shattering conclusion. www.amazon.com
This
is a wonderful summer read with plenty of intrigue, suspense and
romance. My only negative comment is the main character, Troy cries a
lot. I suppose if I was in a similar situation, I would probably cry a
lot too. That being said, Troy's character seems to be an independent
and confident and self-motivated young woman yet she seems to be crying
about something is most of the chapters. Personally, I chose to ignore
that fact because the overall book was well written and the plot was
intriguing.
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