One August afternoon, three teenage girls ride their bikes to the town lake for one last swim before summer ends. What starts as a perfect, ordinary day turns to terror when the ground beneath their feet disappears and all three slip under the surface into water over their heads. None of them can swim. On the shore, surrounded by beachgoers who mistake a drowning girl's desperate wave for a friendly hello, one young mother watches the water and feels something that won't let her look away.
That woman has never really learned to swim. She has a toddler behind her and a husband calling her name. She is completely, thoroughly afraid. She goes in anyway. That Day at the Lake is a deeply human story about the courage required to act in the middle of fear-not instead of it. About the strangers who, in a single unguarded moment, become the most important person in the room. About three girls who ride home quieter than they arrived, and a woman who sits in her kitchen that evening knowing exactly who she is.
Told in five chapters with close, emotionally precise prose, this novella explores what it means to pay attention to the world around you-and what it costs, and what it gives, when the world asks you to be more than you thought you could be.
One August afternoon, three teenage girls ride their bikes to the town lake for one last swim before summer ends. What starts as a perfect, ordinary day turns to terror when the ground beneath their feet disappears and all three slip under the surface into water over their heads. None of them can swim. On the shore, surrounded by beachgoers who mistake a drowning girl's desperate wave for a friendly hello, one young mother watches the water and feels something that won't let her look away.
That woman has never really learned to swim. She has a toddler behind her and a husband calling her name. She is completely, thoroughly afraid. She goes in anyway. That Day at the Lake is a deeply human story about the courage required to act in the middle of fear-not instead of it. About the strangers who, in a single unguarded moment, become the most important person in the room. About three girls who ride home quieter than they arrived, and a woman who sits in her kitchen that evening knowing exactly who she is.
Told in five chapters with close, emotionally precise prose, this novella explores what it means to pay attention to the world around you-and what it costs, and what it gives, when the world asks you to be more than you thought you could be.