Reviewed by Jeanne
Jackie is a social worker and therapist, dealing mostly with
troubled children, helping them to process traumas and build family and social
relationships. She’s good at it; she’s
not so good at repairing breaks with her own family, especially not with her
sister, Lexie. Lexie was always the
golden child, the one for whom things came easily. She was also very good at pushing people’s
buttons, especially Jackie’s.
But Lexie has struggled with her mental heath the past few
years, and Jackie has tried to distance herself—both literally and
figuratively. She’s moved across the
country and limited her contact with her erratic sister, ignoring phone calls
and never visiting. After one particularly manic episode, Jackie steels herself
and returns Lexie’s call but Lexie doesn’t answer.
Lexie has drowned in the family pool at their grandmother’s
house.
Jackie—or Jax, as Lexie dubbed her, calling them the X
girls—goes to clear out Lexie’s things and finds that Lexie had become obsessed
with researching the history of their family and their property, especially the
spring that feeds the pool. There are a
lot of stories about that spring: it’s rumored to have healing properties. It’s
also rumored to grant wishes.
One should always be careful what one wishes for.
I am not a horror reader as a rule. I don’t care for gore and guts or slime. This time of year, though, I do start looking
for books that are a bit creepy, maybe with ghosts, and with lots of
atmosphere. Jennifer McMahon has a
number of books out that fit that description so I decided to give The
Drowning Kind a try. It met my
expectations wonderfully. I like character-driven books, which this is. The story is told from Jackie’s point of
view, but also from the perspective of Ethel, a young wife in the late 1920s
who goes with her husband to a hotel rumored to have the most amazing healing
spring. It’s very well-written, with beautifully descriptive passages. Even though I had a pretty good idea where
the plot was going, I was anxious to see what would happen next. I found myself caught up in both worlds, and
hated to have to close the book. The Drowning Kind was a memorable novel
for me and I expect I will be reading other titles by Jennifer McMahon in the
future.
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