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Nearly four years after leaving Vienna to escape the Nazis, Stephie Steiner, now sixteen, and her sister Nellie, eleven, are still living in Sweden, worrying about their parents and striving to succeed in school, and at odds with each other despite their mutual love.

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6 reviews
It’s been four years since Stephie Steiner and her younger sister Nellie arrived from Vienna as Jewish refugees in Sweden. Stephie is in her final year of grammar school and boards in town with her friend May’s family, while Nellie still lives on the island with her host family. Stephie has many worries. She is in her last year of grammar school. Will the relief committee pay for her to continue her schooling, or will she be forced to leave school and get a job like almost all of the other girls her age? Why is her friend Vera behaving so strangely? Why has Nellie become sullen, angry, and distant? By far her biggest worry is the health and welfare of her parents, who are imprisoned in the Theresienstadt concentration camp.

I loved A show more Faraway Island, the first book in this quartet. It reminded me quite a bit of Anne of Green Gables. I became invested in then twelve-year-old Stephie’s story, and I want to see how her story ends. The books increasingly address more adult themes as Stephie ages, and this book includes themes that would be more appropriate for older teens, about the age that Stephie is in the book (15-16). show less
½
Stephie Steiner is in her last year of grammar school and living with May and her family in Goteburg. Her parents have been transferred to Theresienstadt, but Stephie is able to send care packages. Nellie grows even more distant as her ties to her Swedish foster family strengthen. In this, the third novel in the Faraway Island quartet, Stephie faces more adult problems, making the book more appropriate to older teens. I liked this one more than the last, as it focuses more on the war and less on the teen crush. I'm looking forward to the last novel to see how the author brings the story to a close.
½
Deep Sea is the third book in a series by Annika Thor (Faraway Island and The Lily Pond being the first two installments). The Steiner sisters, Stephie and Nellie, were sent from their home in Vienna to live with foster families in Sweden in 1939 at the outset of WWII. Over the past three years (and first two books) WWII takes off and things quickly go from bad to worse. Their Jewish parents are sent to camps and the sisters have little to no information about their well being. Nellie takes to Sweden right away, easily learning and preferring Swedish to their native German. Stephie does not adapt so well. Her foster mother is cold and staunch and she feels cut off from the world living on the small island. Stephie is able to go to show more school on the mainland where she makes friends. At the end of this third book we learn that Stephie and Nellie’s mother has died and their father has been shipped off to another camp – probably one in Poland – where Stephie is told letters do not go in or out. Things are looking pretty grim as we leave the Steiner sisters and await the fourth and final book.

I enjoyed Deep Sea, but not quite as much as some other WWII choices like The Book Thief, Marika, Number the Stars, Shades of Grey, or The Boy in the Striped Pajamas. (I’m sure I’m forgetting a few). I did enjoy the different setting, but I felt there should have been a bit more history for a historical fiction novel. It reads like a coming of age story with a dash of history thrown in. This could be good for those not too interested in history. The pacing was good and the characters well developed and likable. I also felt like I did not need to read the first two in the series to know what was going on. All in all Deep Sea is a solid choice for tween readers.

Grade Range: 7-9
Genre: Historical
Literary Merit: Good
Characterization: Good
Recommendation: Recommended
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I slipped right back into the story. I really enjoy spending time with Stephie & with all the people and storylines.

This third book definitely moved to of a more young adult than children’s book, though the main character and her storyline could still be considered a children’s book too and she remains naïve in a way that fits a middle grade book, but for at least one of the characters it’s not children’s but young adult, and a rather heavy duty ya in some ways. There is more loss in this book, in a couple types of ways.

It’s a great sister tale but I would have liked more interaction between the sisters here. It does make perfect sense though why there is less of that in this book than the first two books.

I was completely show more engrossed and loved everything about this story. I now consider the 4 book series one story. I’m hoping that I’ll be able to read the fourth book.

The only English language edition of book 4 I see as of now is a Kindle edition. I might have to break my “buy no books” policy if I can find it for extremely cheap, and get it, but I hope I’ll find a paper copy to read. It’s so popular in Sweden and it seems as though a tv mini-series was made based on it, so I’m surprised that the fourth book seems to hard to get in English and most other languages.

It’s often really arbitrary which books I give 4 vs. 5 stars. I’m surprised I continue to like this story in book 3 just as much as I did in books 1 and 2.
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SPOILER ALERT.

I can't say I liked this book as much as the previous two featuring the Steiner sisters. There's a lot less about Nellie and about Stephie's parents, who are now living in Theresienstadt, than there was in the previous two books. And a word to the wise: while "A Faraway Island" and "The Lily Pond" are suitable for middle grades, this one definitely is not. This is mainly because Stephie's friend Vera becomes a bit of a train wreck as the story progresses: she has nude photographs taken for a magazine, and ultimately gets pregnant without knowing who the father is. See what I mean? Stephie's teacher and her "friend" who both come to live with Stephie for the summer so they can tutor her to pass the high school exam are show more obviously lesbians, and there is talk about them sunbathing in the nude and so on, but that potential plot line never went anywhere. It's not like Stephie ever realized what was going on or that the couple got in trouble because of their sexual orientation. Stephie also experiences difficulties with school -- she's not sure if she'll be able to continue with her education, due to lack of funds -- and with the Pentecostal church she attends, who refuse to assist her parents because they're not Christians. It seemed like every chapter of the book introduced a new problem in the story, and it got a bit crowded.

Unlike the other two books (there's a fourth as well, which hasn't been translated yet), this one doesn't seem capable of standing on its own. The ending kind of left me hanging.
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Stephie’s parents are in a concentration camp in Austria, but she and her sister escaped to make a better life for themselves in neutral Sweden. Stephie must balance typical teenage problems with her family’s separation

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Author Information

Picture of author.
Author
30+ Works 1,216 Members

Some Editions

Schenck, Linda (Translator)

Awards and Honors

Series

Belongs to Publisher Series

Carlsen (264)

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Deep Sea
Original title
Havets djup
Original publication date
1998
People/Characters
Stephie Steiner
Important places
Goteburg, Sweden
Important events
World War II
First words
The tram rattles down the wide street.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Yes," says Stephie. "We will."
Original language
Swedish

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Teen, Children's Books, Young Adult
DDC/MDS
839.7374Literature & rhetoricGerman & related literaturesOther Germanic literaturesSwedish literatureSwedish fiction1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PZ7 .T3817 .DLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
136
Popularity
236,955
Reviews
6
Rating
½ (3.69)
Languages
12 — Dutch, English, Faroese, Finnish, French, German, Hungarian, Icelandic, Italian, Japanese, Russian, Swedish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
23
ASINs
2