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We Don't Swim Here

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

New from the 2023 Pura Belpré Award-winning author of Burn Down, Rise Up!

She is the reason no one goes in the water. And she will make them pay. A chilling new novel for fans of Tiffany D. Jackson, Lamar Giles, and Ryan Douglass.

Bronwyn is only supposed to be in rural Hillwoods for a year. Her grandmother is in hospice, and her father needs to get her affairs in order. And they're all meant to make some final memories together. 

Except Bronwyn is miserable. Her grandmother is dying, everyone is standoffish, and she can't even go swimming. All she hears are warnings about going in the water, despite a gorgeous lake. And a pool at the abandoned rec center. And another in the high school basement.

Anais tries her hardest to protect Bronwyn from the shadows of Hillwoods. She follows her own rituals to avoid any unnecessary attention—and if she can just get Bronwyn to stop asking questions, she can protect her too. The less Bronwyn pays attention to Hillwoods, the less Hillwoods will pay attention to Bronwyn. She doesn't get that the lore is, well, truth. History. Pain. The living aren't the only ones who seek retribution when they're wronged. But when Bronwyn does more exploring than she should, they are both in for danger they couldn't expect.

Praise for Vincent Tirado's Burn Down, Rise Up:

"A queer, heart-pounding thrill ride. Fans of Attack the Block and Vampires vs. the Bronx: prepare for your newest obsession." — Ryan Douglass, New York Times bestselling author of The Taking of Jake Livingston

"A creepy, mysterious rollercoaster of a novel that had me hooked from the explosive start. Tirado packs both action and heart into this timely story." — Natasha Ngan, New York Times bestselling author of the Girls of Paper and Fire trilogy

"A breathtaking, read-it-in-one-sitting thrill of a novel." — Marieke Nijkamp, #1 New York Times bestselling author of This Is Where It Ends

"Readers will be on the edge of their seats and will have the chance to explore societal issues in a new way to answer the question "What are monsters?" when reading this book" — School Library Journal, STARRED review

"A speculative novel that blends elements of horror with a history of gentrification and systemic racism..." — Publishers Weekly

"A deadly game meets social commentary in an ode to the Bronx." — Kirkus

"A sense of dread and... plenty of vivid action sequences to keep readers engaged. " — Youth Services Book Review

"Clever, tying into ripped-from-the-headlines police violence in the present-day world..." — Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 3, 2023
      A Black high school junior moves to a town haunted by its tragic history in this ambitious paranormal horror novel from Tirado (Burn Down Rise Up). When her paternal grandfather, Lala, falls ill, star swimmer Bronwyn Sawyer moves from Illinois to Hillwoods, a tightly knit town in rural Arkansas. She quickly learns that Hillwoods is ruled by ritual steeped in superstition, and that swimming is forbidden due to a legend involving a murdered woman drowning people at a nearby lake. Bronwyn attempts to rekindle her relationship with her estranged townie cousin Anais, who is Black and queer, but the girls clash over Anais’s increasingly cagey behavior surrounding the supernatural roots of Hillwoods’ history. Anais asserts that her secretiveness is for Bronwyn’s own good and encourages Bronwyn to stop looking into the town’s past. While the mythos behind Hillwoods’ rituals is unique and eerie, the effect is somewhat deflated by a lack of horror-related happenings; grounded sequences depicting a violent hate crime, gun violence, and physical assault make up the bulk of the conflict. Nevertheless, Tirado doles out a chilling ghost story via Bronwyn and Anais’s courageous and urgent dual perspectives. Ages 12–up. Agent: Kristina Pérez, Zeno Agency.

    • Booklist

      May 1, 2023
      Grades 9-12 Seventeen-year-old Bronwyn and her parents move to her father's hometown for a year when her grandmother, Lala, goes into hospice. Bronwyn, a competitive swimmer, is stunned to learn that all the pools in town have been drained and locked up. Even the lake is offlimits. Everyone seems to be following a secret set of rules, and her cousin Anais won't explain anything. Bronwyn finally learns that the town is haunted by a vengeful ghost, but when she literally falls into the truth, she is sympathetic rather than terrified. The ghost, Sweetie, is lingering after she was killed in a horrific act of racism, and apart from the tourists that disappear every 10 years, Sweetie only pursues the people who hurt and killed her. Bronwyn and Anais take turns narrating the first-person chapters, giving the reader varied perspectives on the plot. Tirado builds the suspense gradually until Bronwyn learns the truth; after that, the tension skyrockets. Both Bronwyn and Anais are sympathetic characters, and secondary personalities are sharply drawn, with all contributing to the plot.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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