Book Description
Deftly written and emotionally powerful, Drowning Ruth is a stunning portrait of the ties that bind sisters together and the forces that tear them apart, of the dangers of keeping secrets and the explosive repercussions when they are exposed. A mesmerizing and achingly beautiful debut.
Winter, 1919. Amanda Starkey spends her days nursing soldiers wounded in the Great War. Finding herself suddenly overwhelmed, she flees Milwaukee and retreats to her family's farm on Nagawaukee Lake, seeking comfort with her younger sister, Mathilda, and three-year-old niece, Ruth. But very soon, Amanda comes to see that her old home is no refuge--she has carried her troubles with her. On one terrible night almost a year later, Amanda loses nearly everything that is dearest to her when her sister mysteriously disappears and is later found drowned beneath the ice that covers the lake. When Mathilda's husband comes home from the war, wounded and troubled himself, he finds that Amanda has taken charge of Ruth and the farm, assuming her responsibility with a frightening intensity. Wry and guarded, Amanda tells the story of her family in careful doses, as anxious to hide from herself as from us the secrets of her own past and of that night.
Ruth, haunted by her own memory of that fateful night, grows up under the watchful eye of her prickly and possessive aunt and gradually becomes aware of the odd events of her childhood. As she tells her own story with increasing clarity, she reveals the mounting toll that her aunt's secrets exact from her family and everyone around her, until the heartrending truth is uncovered.
Guiding us through the lives of the Starkey women, Christina Schwarz's first novel shows her compassion and a unique understanding of the American landscape and the people who live on it.
Amazon.com
For 19th-century novelists--from Jane Austen to George Eliot, Flaubert to Henry James--social constraint gave a delicious tension to their plots. Yet now our relaxed morals and social mobility have rendered many of the classics untenable. Why shouldn't Maisie know what she knows? It will all come out in family therapy anyway. The vogue for historical novels depends in part on our pleasure in reentering a world of subtle cues and repressed emotion, a time in which a young woman could destroy her life by saying yes to the wrong man. After all, there was no reliable birth control, no divorce, no chance of an independent life or a scandal-free separation.
Christina Schwarz's suspenseful debut pivots on two of the lost "virtues" of the past: silence and stoicism. Drowning Ruth opens in 1919, on the heels of the influenza epidemic that followed the First World War. Although there were telephones and motor cars and dance halls in the small towns of Wisconsin in those years, the townspeople remained rigid and forbidding. As a young woman, Amanda Starkey, a Lutheran farmer's daughter, had been firmly discouraged from an inappropriate marriage with a neighboring Catholic boy. A few years later, as a nurse in Milwaukee, she is seduced by a dishonorable man. Her shame sends her into a nervous breakdown, and she returns to the family farm. Within a year, though, her beloved sister Mathilde drowns under mysterious circumstances. And when Mathilde's husband, Carl, returns from the war, he finds his small daughter, Ruth, in Amanda's tenacious grip, and she will tell him nothing about the night his wife drowned. Amanda's parents, too, are long gone. "I killed my parents. Had I mentioned that?" muses Amanda.
I killed them because I felt a little fatigued and suffered from a slight, persistent cough. Thinking I was overworked and hadn't been getting enough sleep, I went home for a short visit, just a few days to relax in the country while the sweet corn and the raspberries were ripe. From the city I brought fancy ribbon, two boxes of Ambrosia chocolate, and a deadly gift... I gave the influenza to my mother, who gave it to my father, or maybe it was the other way around."
Schwarz is a skillful writer, weaving her grim tale across several decades, always returning to the fateful night of Mathilde's death. Drowning Ruth displays her gift for pacing and her harsh insistence on the right ending, rather than the cheery one.
--Regina Marler
From Publishers Weekly
"Ruth remembered drowning." The first sentence of this brilliantly understated psychological thriller leaps off the page and captures the reader's imagination. In Schwarz's debut novel, brutal Wisconsin weather and WWI drama color a tale of family rivalry, madness, secrets and obsessive love. By March 1919, Nurse Amanda Starkey has come undone. She convinces herself that her daily exposure to the wounded soldiers in the Milwaukee hospital where she works is the cause of her hallucinations, fainting spells and accidents. Amanda journeys home to the family farm in Nagawaukee, where her sister, Mathilda (Mattie), lives with her three-year-old daughter Ruth, awaiting the return of her war-injured husband, Carl Neumann. Mattie's ebullient welcome convinces Amanda she can mend there. But then Mattie drowns in the lake that surrounds the sisters' island house and, in a rush of confusion and anguish, Amanda assumes care of Ruth. After Carl comes home, Amanda and he manage to work together on the farm and parent Ruth, but their arrangement is strained: Amanda has a breakdown and recuperates at a sanatorium. As time passes, Ruth grows into an odd, guarded child who clings to perplexing memories of the night her mother drowned. Why does Amanda have that little circle of scars on her hand? What is Amanda's connection to Ruth's friend Imogene and why does she fear Imogene's marriage to Clement Owen's son? Schwarz deftly uses first-person narration to heighten the drama. Her prose is spare but bewitching, and she juggles the speakers and time periods with the surety of a seasoned novelist. Rather than attempting a trumped-up suspenseful finale, Schwarz ends her novel gently, underscoring the delicate power of her tale. Agent, Jennifer R. Walsh at the Writers Shop. Literary Guild, Doubleday Book Club, Teen People and Mango Book Club main selections; film rights optioned by Miramax, Wes Craven to direct; foreign rights sold in Germany, France, the U.K., Japan, Italy, the Netherlands, Finland, Sweden and Denmark. (Aug.)
From School Library Journal
YA-A wonderfully constructed gothic suspense novel set on a stark Wisconsin farm in 1919. The story goes backward and forward in time and is told by Amanda, her niece Ruth, and an omniscient narrator. The ties that bind the two women are as fragile as they are fierce and have their origin in the relationship of two sisters, Amanda and her sister Mattie, Ruth's mother. The narrative begins with Amanda as she recounts her childhood and the responsibility she came to feel for her younger sister and the parents who favored her younger sibling. Amanda finally wrests herself away from home to become a nurse, but her independence is short-lived. Overwhelmed and sickened by the care of the wounded, and heartsick over the love of a married man, she suffers a nervous breakdown and seeks solace by returning to the farm to help Mattie care for her tiny daughter as they await the return of Mattie's husband from World War I. But tragedy follows with Mattie's mysterious drowning during a winter blizzard and guilty lies soon engulf Amanda and threaten to change the lives of several others in the small rural community. A compelling complex tale of psychological mystery and maddeningly destructive provincial attitudes.
Jackie Gropman, Kings Park Library, Fairfax, VA
From Library Journal
Why did Ruth's mother, Mathilda, drown on that fateful night in 1919 and Ruth survive? That is the central question that this novel sets out to answer. Mathilda's sister, Amanda, who has been nursing soldiers in Milwaukee (it is right after World War I), has returned to the family farm in rural Wisconsin. Mathilda and Ruth are there to help her return to a normal life. Yet a year later, Mathilda's husband returns from the war to find his wife drowned and his sister-in-law raising his daughter. So continues the tale through 1941, as we watch Ruth grow up and try to remember what happened that winter night. Along the way, Ruth befriends Imogene, who has a closer connection to the family than Ruth can imagine. The story is recounted partly through flashback and moves from first-person to third-person narrative. What results is a gripping tale of sisterly rivalry, family loyalty, and secret histories. Already optioned for a film by Miramax, to be directed by Wes Craven, this first novel is an engrossing read. Recommended for all public libraries.DRobin Nesbitt, Columbus Metropolitan Lib., OH
From Kirkus Reviews
With quietly powerful prose and carefully nuanced description, a first-novelist creates a satisfying fictional world inhabited by complicated people painfully coming to terms with their common history.The plot revolves around a mystery, which is well handled but secondary to the characters' development. In 1919, when unmarried Amanda Starkey leaves her nursing job in Milwaukee under duress, she goes home to her sister, Mattie, and three-year-old niece, Ruth, in rural Wisconsin. One bitter winter night shortly before her wounded husband, Carl, is due to return from WWI, Mattie falls through the ice and drowns in the lake that surrounds their island farm. In the years that follow, Carl and Amanda share responsibility for raising Ruth, maintaining an uneasy truce even as he struggles against her evasions to understand exactly how and why Mattie drowned. The circumstances of that drowning are slowly revealed, and Schwarz avoids most of the pitfalls of the unravel-the-awful-secret genre. Yes, there are plenty of awful secrets to share or hide. Yes, Ruth almost drowned too, and yes, Amanda was hiding an illegitimate pregnancy, but the story never turns to melodrama. The author's concern is less with keeping readers in suspense than with exploring the damage inflicted by the human drive to protect not only oneself but those one loves. Schwarz keeps the focus on the choices, interactions, and all-too-frequent misunderstandings of her people, all of whom react to the effects of tragedy with surprising complexity. The narrative jumps from viewpoint to viewpoint a bit too jerkily at times, but the charm of its detail and the generous insight into even small, imperfect lives more than compensate for minor technical lapses.An engrossing debut from a writer to watch.Film rights to Miramax
About Author
Christina Schwarz grew up in Wisconsin. She and her husband live in New Hampshire, where she is at work on her second novel.
Book Dimension:
length: (cm)17.4 width:(cm) 10.8
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这本书带给我的震撼,更多的是那种近乎生理上的不适感,但这种不适感恰恰证明了其强大的艺术感染力。作者对“秘密”的描绘达到了出神入化的地步,秘密不仅仅是情节的驱动力,它本身就是一种活物,在角色体内腐烂、生长,最终决定他们的命运。我注意到,书中关于道德模糊地带的描述尤其精彩,没有绝对的恶,只有层层叠叠的误解和不可逆转的选择。它展示了“善意”是如何被扭曲,最终酿成悲剧。文风冷峻而克制,没有过度的煽情,但情感的暗流却汹涌澎湃,这种反差制造了极强的张力。读到最后,我不是为角色感到“悲伤”,而是感到一种深刻的“无奈”,面对生活本身的残酷性所产生的无力感。这是一部让人久久不能释怀的作品,它更像是一面镜子,映照出我们每个人内心深处都有可能存在的裂痕。
评分我必须承认,这本书在构建氛围方面做到了极致。那种挥之不去、弥漫在字里行间的压抑感,让人从翻开第一页起就被牢牢锁住。作者的叙事视角非常独特,有时候像是贴在皮肤上的特写,细腻到能感受到角色每一次呼吸的起伏;有时候又突然拉远,让你看到更大的悲剧背景,这种切换非常流畅自然。关于“真相”的探寻,这本书采取了一种非常迂回的方式,它更关注的是人们如何选择性地记忆和讲述自己的故事,以求得暂时的安宁。这种对心理防御机制的精准捕捉,让人拍案叫绝。我尤其喜欢那种充满象征意义的意象,它们不断地在文本中重复出现,像一种低沉的背景音乐,预示着即将到来的风暴。总而言之,这是一部充满复杂层次的、对人性深度挖掘的杰作,读完后,我需要一段时间来“净化”我的思绪,重新回到日常的平静中去。
评分读完这本书,我的第一反应是:这作者简直是个情绪的魔术师。他似乎能轻易地操控读者的心弦,让你在不经意间就跌入他构建的情感陷阱。叙事节奏的把握堪称一绝,时而如同凝滞的琥珀,将某个关键的瞬间无限拉长,让我们细细品味其中的张力;时而又像脱缰的野马,信息如瀑布般倾泻而下,让你应接不暇。我特别欣赏作者对环境描写的运用,那些场景不仅仅是背景,它们本身就是角色的一部分,是情绪的投射。比如某个特定的季节、某间老旧的屋子,都带着一种挥之不去的宿命感。这本书探讨的主题宏大而私密,关于“真相”和“自我欺骗”之间的界限到底在哪里,让人读完后开始质疑自己过去的一些认知。它迫使你去直面那些不愿触碰的角落,不是用说教的方式,而是通过一个个鲜活的、充满血肉的故事,让你自己得出结论。文学性非常高,文字本身就具有一种近乎诗意的力量。
评分这本书简直是本心灵的暴风雨,读完之后感觉心脏像是被人狠狠攥住又缓缓松开,那种余韵久久不能散去。作者的笔触非常细腻,尤其是在刻画人物内心挣扎和微妙的情感变化时,简直是神来之笔。我很少看到有哪部作品能将人性的复杂面剖析得如此透彻,没有绝对的好人或坏人,每个人都有自己的不得已和幽暗的角落。情节的推进不是那种大开大合的刺激,而是像潮水一样,一点点地、不容置疑地将你拖入故事的核心,让你感同身受那些角色的痛苦与抉择。特别是关于“记忆”和“创伤”的探讨,那种挥之不去的阴影是如何塑造一个人的,写得非常深刻。我一度需要停下来,深吸一口气,才能继续读下去,因为那种压抑感实在太真实了。它不是一本让人读起来轻松愉快的书,但绝对是一部值得反复品味的文学作品,每一次重读,都会有新的感悟,仿佛自己也随着角色的命运经历了一场漫长的救赎或沉沦。
评分说实话,一开始抱着非常高的期望去阅读,毕竟名声在外,但实际的阅读体验比我想象的要沉重得多。这本书成功之处在于它没有试图提供任何简单的答案或廉价的安慰。相反,它像一把锋利的手术刀,精准地切开了人性中最脆弱、最矛盾的部分。我特别喜欢作者对时间线的处理,那种非线性的叙事结构,像打碎的镜子一样,需要读者自己去拼凑完整的画面。这个过程本身就是一种参与,一种智力上的挑战。随着拼图的逐渐完整,那种令人心悸的顿悟感才真正袭来。它不是一部快餐式的读物,它要求你投入全部的注意力,去捕捉那些隐藏在对话间隙、沉默之处的潜台词。对于那些喜欢深度解读、热衷于挖掘文本深层含义的读者来说,这本书无疑是一座宝库。但如果只是想找点轻松的东西来消磨时间,那可能会觉得有些吃力。
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