THE HIGHEST TIDE
A former Oregonian writer finds magic on the shores of Puget Sound.
October 4th, 2006
The Littlest Hitler | Seattle author takes a hilarious bite outta Left Coast suburbia.0 comments
September 6th, 2006
The Traveling Death And Resurrection Show | Portlander's debut novel shows promise, talent but falters.1 comment
August 16th, 2006
THE THINGS BETWEEN US | Between Lee Montgomery and her memoir lies only self-pity.7 comments
August 2nd, 2006
The Cantor's Daughter | When emotions are fragile, Scott Nadelson pushes them to the breaking point.0 comments
July 19th, 2006
Last Week's Apocalypse | Portlander Douglas Lain slings shovel-loads from our national midden.0 comments
July 12th, 2006
A Sense Of The World | A tour de force biography of a man who led the way in every sense but sight.0 comments
July 5th, 2006
The Whole World Over | Julia Glass' sophomore effort proves her 2002 National Book Award was no fluke.0 comments
June 28th, 2006
Girls In Peril1 comment
June 7th, 2006
Literary Threesome | A triple threat against the usual, boring beach book.0 comments
May 31st, 2006
The Unsettling: Stories By Peter Rock | A Reed College professor mines Portland's landscape for chills.0 comments
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[October 12th, 2005] THE HIGHEST TIDE By Jim Lynch (Bloomsbury, 247 pages, $23.95)
Onetime Oregonian reporter Jim Lynch's debut novel is a moving reminder that the Garden of Eden is not a mythical place but a planet covered mostly by oceans that contain 80 percent of all known life. Thirteen-year-old Miles O'Malley sneaks out at night to explore and collect specimens from this teeming aquatic universe found in the tidal flats surrounding his family's Puget Sound home. One night he discovers something washed up that's never been seen on Washington's Olympic Peninsula before—a giant squid—and what's more, it may still be alive. Next, Miles finds another large, prehistoric-looking deep-sea creature not usually found in the South Sound, and so begins a magical summer in the life of a fascinating boy who idolizes Rachel Carson like some kids worship rock stars. Is the earth trying to tell us something, as Miles muses absent-mindedly to a TV reporter, or is Miles O'Malley the only person finding rare and exotic species in Puget Sound because he's the only one looking? As Miles attracts a literal cult following, the would-be boy messiah must also struggle with a dysfunctional mother and father on the verge of divorce, an aging mentor ravaged by Parkinson's disease, and a hard-rocking ex-babysitter who may be the true love of his life if she doesn't die of a drug overdose first. Lynch builds suspense like a surging tide, taking time to show his readers the life-affirming wonders found in the swirling eddies along the way. This is a funny, tender novel that shows what can happen when we hold out our hands to catch the rain and follow Miles' advice: "Look around".
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