Adrift in Currents Clean and Clear
Seanan McGuire
The origin stories of Seanan McGuire's Wayward Children series have a formula. They start with a child who doesn't fit. He or she is abandoned by those who should under ordinary circumstances take responsibility for providing them with a healthy childhood. In some cases the abandonment is more figurative than literal. In others -- and Nadya is one -- the abandonment is literal and explicit. This child comes across a door, always bearing the words "Be sure" that takes her to a new world where she fits better.
Unusually, we are often told the ends of the Wayward Children stories before the beginnings. We have met Nadya before, in Beneath the Sugar Sky, where we met her as one of the students of Eleanor West’s Home for Wayward Children, where she was introduced as a "Drowned Girl" who "was one of the school’s long-timers: five years so far, from the age of eleven to the age of sixteen." Thus we already know that Nadya's story will eventually bring her to Eleanor's.
Adrift in Currents Clean and Clear tells the beginning of Nadya's story. Nadya begins as a Russian orphan, abandoned by her mother, who doesn't want a child. As we learned in Sugar Sky she eventually was adopted by an American couple. That after that she ended up with Eleanor and no desire to return to her adoptive home tells us how well that worked out. There follows the story of her sojourn in and eventual ejection from Belyyreka, the Drowned World.
Adrift in Currents Clean and Clear is, I would say, a typical and average Wayward Children novel -- not bad, but not the best. It feels like it exists to fill in a story that, since Sugar Sky, we've known needed to be told.
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