3/2/26

Book of the Week (3/2/2026)

Where the Water Meets the Sky: A Novel by Diane Les Becquets (Simon & Schuster, 2026)

On a night in January, on the Garden Peninsula of Michigan, a farmhouse burns to the ground. A young child makes it out and flees into the woods with a book of matches in her hand.

Ten years later, Abby, a lover of birds and the natural world, returns to Garden, to the woods and lakes and farms and fisheries of her childhood, to assist her uncle on an environmental study of trees. Her best friend, Brew, invites her to a party where she meets a troubled girl named Seda, on the run from her abusive ex. Abby sets out to protect Seda and introduces her to an abandoned cabin that becomes a sanctuary for them both. Here, Abby begins to process her unrequited feelings for Brew while also discovering the person she is becoming. She wants more for her life, a hunger both spiritual and physical, and seeks to understand the trauma of her childhood that took her mother from her. Abby cares deeply for the people and flora and fauna around her and identifies with the wounds of the environment. She is desperate to remember what happened the night of the fire and as the summer of 1996 unfolds, Abby will be forced to reckon with the truth.

Perfect for fans of the lush and tender nature writing of Helen Macdonald and Richard Powers, Where the Water Meets the Sky is a coming-of-age novel that expertly delves into the connection between our perception of ourselves and our natural environs. It is a paean to the vast and beautiful wildscape around us and to the power of community and the wisdom of love. --Publisher's blurb

About the author:

Diane Les Becquets is most at home writing about strong characters whose lives are physically and emotionally connected to their natural environments. She has worked alongside archaeologists, wildlife biologists, conservation canine handlers, and foresters, and spends much of her free time exploring remote landscapes and wilderness areas. Ingrained in all of this is her love of story and her attention to the individual lives of those who inhabit those settings. She also enjoys snowshoeing, archery, swimming, kayaking still waters, and backpacking. She lives in the northern woods of New Hampshire and serves as a professor of English and program director at Southern New Hampshire University.

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