Siren
- 384 pages
- 14 hours of reading
Something deadly waits beneath the waves off Winter Harbour, and this summer, no one's safe. Seventeen-year-old Vanessa Sands is afraid of the dark.
Tricia Rayburn writes in a genre that can be described as magical realism. Her work often explores the complex relationships between people and the natural world. Rayburn investigates themes of identity, memory, and the human longing for connection. Her debut novel, The Melting of Maggie Bean, is a coming-of-age story that delves into the depths of the human psyche.



Something deadly waits beneath the waves off Winter Harbour, and this summer, no one's safe. Seventeen-year-old Vanessa Sands is afraid of the dark.
The sirens are back, but Vanessa may be the biggest threat of all ... Nothing has been normal since Vanessa Sands learned that her sister was murdered by sirens - femme fatales of the watery depths - and that everything she believed about herself and her family was a lie. Vanessa has always told her boyfriend Simon everything. But she worries that if he finds out who - or what - she truly is, he'll run a mile. To make things worse, when Parker, Hawthorne Prep's resident charmer, shows an interest in her, she can't resist the siren's urge to stray
In "Dark Water: A Siren Novel," seventeen-year-old Vanessa confronts the challenges of being a siren when she reunites with her biological mother, forcing her to choose between her survival and the safety of her loved ones.