
Reach for this book when your child is processing a deep loss and feels stuck in the quiet, heavy stillness of grief. It is a gentle companion for the middle-schooler who needs to see that while life may never be the same after a tragedy, it can eventually feel full and purposeful again. Set in a remote Maine lighthouse during the 1800s, the story follows Quila and her father as they navigate their mourning in isolation. Their world shifts when a baby unexpectedly washes ashore after a storm, forcing them both to step out of their sorrow and into the role of caregivers. This historical novel is ideal for ages 8 to 12 because it treats sadness with profound respect while slowly weaving in threads of hope and new responsibility. Parents will appreciate how the book models the way service to others and the rhythms of nature can facilitate emotional healing without rushing the process.
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Sign in to write a reviewA heavy storm and a shipwreck occur, leading to the baby being washed ashore.
The book deals directly with the death of a mother and the subsequent depression of the surviving parent. The approach is secular and realistic, focusing on the sensory experience of loss. The resolution is hopeful but grounded: it does not magically bring the mother back, but it shows the characters finding a 'new normal.'
A reflective 9 or 10-year-old who has experienced a significant family change and feels 'frozen' in their emotions. It is perfect for a child who finds comfort in nature and historical settings.
Read the storm scene (the discovery of the baby) together. It is emotionally charged but serves as the turning point for the characters' recovery. A parent might choose this after hearing their child say 'Nothing matters anymore' or noticing the child has withdrawn into solitary play following a loss.
Younger readers (age 8) will focus on the 'miracle' of the baby and the survival elements. Older readers (age 11-12) will better grasp the father's depression and Quila's burden of responsibility.
Unlike many books about grief that focus on social settings like schools, this uses the extreme isolation of a lighthouse to externalize the internal feeling of being alone in one's sadness.
Quila and her father live a solitary life at a Maine lighthouse, paralyzed by the recent death of Quila's mother. Their internal world is as stark and cold as the Atlantic until a shipwreck leaves a living baby in the tide. The necessity of caring for the infant forces them to reconnect with the world and each other, transforming their grief into a new kind of family.
This overview was generated by AI based on the book's content and reviews, and may not capture every nuance.