The Drowning Summer captivates readers with its fog-drenched coastal setting and a high-stakes mystery that weaves family secrets into a haunting supernatural landscape. The story grounds its paranormal elements in the raw, yearning tension of a second-chance romance. Books in this family share a moody atmosphere, intertwining personal identity with dangerous magic and ancestral shadows.

Reach for this book when your teen is grappling with the weight of family expectations or the isolation of being an outsider in their own community. It is a haunting contemporary fantasy that explores how we navigate grief and the secrets our families keep. The story follows two girls, Evelyn and Mina, as they confront a local murder mystery and their own complicated histories with the supernatural. Parents will appreciate how it handles themes of accountability and identity, though it is best suited for mature readers due to its eerie atmosphere and depictions of death. It offers a profound look at how young people can reclaim their narratives from the mistakes of previous generations.