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The Sea Of Light

Jenifer Levin

$69.99

Paperback

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English
Plume
01 June 1994
When hurricane Angelita hits the Sargasso Sea, it brings down a plane carrying a team of star-quality swimmers, young men and women groomed from childhood to compete at the international level. Babe Delgado, a Cuban-American woman, survives - but barely, damaged in body and soul - and is recruited for a small university team. Coach Brenna Allen is tough, determined to build up Babe's strength, and driven to win. Ellie Marks, team captain, is a mediocre swimmer and the daughter of Holocaust survivors; she is struggling with her sexuality as much as she's working to win for Brenna - but she might have enough love in her to save Babe and herself. A sensitive, powerful tale of self-discovery, sexual identity, and violent emotions unleashed by sudden disaster, The Sea of Light is a haunting and brilliant novel.
By:  
Imprint:   Plume
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 202mm,  Width: 133mm,  Spine: 27mm
Weight:   332g
ISBN:   9780452270596
ISBN 10:   0452270596
Pages:   400
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Reviews for The Sea Of Light

Ambitious new fiction from Levin (Shimoni's Lover, 1987, etc.) degenerates, despite some vivid writing, into a mawkish - and always politically correct - paean to the redemptive power of love, especially women's love. Returning to the world of competitive swimming (Water Dancer, 1982), Levin tells the story of three desperately unhappy women: college swim-coach Brenna Allen and her two star swimmers - Cuban-American Babe Delgado, and Ellie Marks, only child of an aging Holocaust survivor. Brenna, who's just lost her lover Kay to cancer, is trying to overcome her grief by building a champion swimming team. Babe, the only one of two survivors in an air crash in which swim teammates were killed, is recovering from her physical injuries and dealing with memories of beloved Liz, who had betrayed her, as well as with lingering fears evoked by her former coach, a certifiable off-the-wall sadist who made his team kill animals and drink their blood. And, last, Ellie yearns for love but must struggle with the guilt she feels at being alive while her siblings lost their lives in the Holocaust. Over the school year, thanks to Brenna's martinet regimen, the team begins to win; and Babe and Ellie not only challenge themselves physically but experience hope and renewal. Babe, able to exorcise her past (thanks to a sorceress Cuban aunt), admits to Ellie that she loves her. Ellie, loving Babe in return, can thank her parents now for giving her life, making her necessary. And with more violins tuning up, Brenna too finds love with an old college friend. (Ellie: We have to be alone for final journeys but I'm grateful for the company and the love. ) An awkward mix of the profound and the political as Levin's well-defined characters offer tiresomely banal and tendentious comments on life and love - without adding much new to either. (Kirkus Reviews)


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