Daughter of the Deep by Rick Riordan (Puffin, Penguin Random House) PB RRP $22.99 ISBN: 9780241538180
Reviewed by Kellie Nissen
The impossible is merely the possible for which we
don’t know the science …
Ana Dakkar and older brother, Dev, are students at Harding-Pencroft
Academy, an elite high school, known for producing the world’s best marine
scientists, naval warriors, navigators, and underwater explorers.
The story starts innocently enough, with Ana and Dev meeting for an
early morning dive with Socrates, their favourite dolphin. However, readers
soon realise there is more than meets the eye at this boarding school –
including a host of well-kept secrets and the mysterious death of Ana and Dev’s
parents, two years previously.
Heading off on a weekend trial at sea, Ana’s class of twenty first-year
students, their teacher and their driver watch in horror as the sea ripples,
the ground shakes and their school crumbles into the ocean – taking with it all
of Harding-Pencroft’s remaining students and staff.
Devastated and in shock, the students turn to teacher, Dr Hewett who is,
himself, terrified. What they thought was a freak earthquake is actually more
sinister – an attack from the Land Institute. The schools have been ‘at war’
for the past 150 years and now, it’s come to a head.
Secrets from the past start unfolding and, owing to her family history, Ana
finds herself nervously in charge. Can a thirteen-year-old successfully lead
her peers in battle? How can a group of inexperienced first-year students navigate
the depths of the ocean, cajole a disgruntled nineteenth-century submarine with
a mind of its own, and outwit a group of older students and adults bent on
destroying them?
In Daughter of the Deep, Rick Riordan gives a sizable nod to French
novelist, Jules Verne, with his modern take on Verne’s classic 20,000
Leagues Under the Sea.
Known for his various book series, including Percy Jackson and The
Kane Chronicles, Riordan has long been asked to write a story with a strong
female protagonist – and this gripping tale, full of clever teens, mind-blowing
technology and a hidden island and underwater base is it.
The story will appeal to mid-grade readers, aged nine and above, who
love fantasy, sci-fi and adventure all rolled into one.
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