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To Heaven by Water [Paperback]

Justin Cartwright (Author)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Paperback, April 5, 2010 --  

Book Description

April 5, 2010
David Cross can't tell Ed or Lucy that he is in some ways happier now that their mother is dead; to his own mind he is more himself than he has been for nearly forty years. When Nancy was alive, he had secrets that he kept from her. Now that she is dead he has a secret that he must keep from his children: he is not unhappy. To Heaven by Water is a touching and hilarious portrait of the Cross family trying in their own way to come to terms with their lives after the mother has died. David misses his wife, but is not unhappy, although he spends a worrying amount of time in the gym. His son Ed's marriage to the lovely Rosalie, a ballet dancer, is suffering strains, and daughter Lucy is being stalked by her ex-boyfriend. Both children worry that their father will soon be finding a new partner. The book opens as David is taking time out with his brother in the Kalahari Desert, reliving his disturbing and uplifting memories of Rome where he worked on a film with Richard Burton. Back home in London, Ed is trying to balance his affair with a young woman in his office, with his real love for his wife, who is unable to conceive the child she longs for, and Lucy, who has just been voted in at No 6 in The Evening News section, What's Hot and What's Not, is falling in love again. She is a young woman in pursuit of her true self. A story of friendship, of forgiveness and of love that come from unexpected directions, it is an exploration of what we might hope for from this life, particularly the possibility of transcendence. Into the beautifully observed, subtly woven texture of this tale of middle-class London life, Justin Cartwright weaves sudden shocks that tear it apart and expose its frailty, moments of sex and revenge and violence that appear from a cloudless sky to take the reader's breath away.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

'A profound exploration of guilt, friendship, voyeurism and morality. A cracker.' Independent on Sunday 'A richly detailed evocation of one of the darkest periods in modern history, and an eloquent exploration of human fallibility and guilt.' The Times 'A compelling tale of morality and friendship told with Cartwright's customary wit and erudition.' Mail on Sunday 'Cartwright's exploration of this man's nature is subtle and fascinating This is a deeply thoughtful novel, written with originality and force.' Helen Dunmore, Guardian

About the Author

Justin Cartwright's novels include the Booker-shortlisted In Every Face I Meet, the Whitbread Novel Award-winner Leading the Cheers and the acclaimed White Lightning, shortlisted for the 2002 Whitbread Novel Award. His previous novel, The Promise of Happiness, won the 2005 Hawthorden Prize. Justin Cartwright was born in South Africa and lives in London.

Product Details

  • Paperback
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC; Open market ed edition (April 5, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1408806029
  • ISBN-13: 978-1408806029
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
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2 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Magnificent, August 10, 2009
I should confess to being a bit of a fan of Cartwright's and particularly of his last novel, the Song Before it is Sung. But while that was an audacious historical novel set around 30s Oxford and the Stauffenberg plot, a glance at the back cover of his new book showed a far less ambitious novel fixated on domestic London life. I wasn't sure what to expect...

But in a way, it's the everyday setting that makes it all the greater an achievement. A smaller canvas, maybe, but there are no tricks and conceits to carry the writing along - it has to survive line by line without dramatic historical events to help it on its way. And Cartwright is masterful at it. He is one of those writers whom one reads while constantly thinking aloud to oneself: how can he know this about people - about relationships - about life? How can he be so perceptive? There's a wisdom to the writing, often manifested in a beautiful and sometimes deceptively simple turn of phrase, that gets to immediately to the point: be it describing Gordon Brown perfectly in three words, or explaining the guilt one might feel after the death of a loved one. It seems to me the most emotionally charged of his novels and it also includes, which i wasn't expecting, some jaw-droppingly dramatic moments which really keep the pages turning.

In summary, a wonderful book that I will treasure.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "All I can tell you Lucy is that you and Ed are everything to me", September 17, 2009
By 
Michael Leonard "MikeonAlpha" (Silver Lake, Los Angeles, USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
Set in inner London this marvelously erudite contemporary novel is about the upper-middle class Cross family and how they manage to tackle life with its infinite numbers of expressions, beliefs and delusions. Set against the backdrop of a newly appointed Prime Minister Gordon Brown, "who seems to be like something discovered when a glacier moves," Cartwright's new and dynamic London is pulsating with energy and a sort of fluid and hip sexuality. Certainly retired television presenter David Cross is in thrall to it, just as comfortable wandering the streets of Soho as he is living in the family home in Camden. Ed, David's son thinks his father is encumbered with his past, "a Bactrian camel, staggering along laden with all sorts of goods nobody needs or wants anymore." For David, however this is a time of renewal. His wife Nancy, only recently passed on from cancer, has enabled David to begin a new lease of life. Fanatically training at the local gym, he's become super thin and now sports trendy African bangles his brother has sent him from Africa. In his own mind he is more himself than he has been for nearly forty years. One night at the Royal ballet with Ed and his daughter-in-law Rosalie, he sees the gorgeous vision of Darcey Bussell in her farewell performance, the ballerina turning David trance-like. It is this vision that frames David`s emotional state and unfurls many of the assumptions that he has made about his marriage to Nancy and about his children.

In alternative chapters Cartwright unfurls the desires, needs and insecurities of David, Ed, Rosalie and David's daughter the twenty-six year old Lucy who a specialist in roman coinage who currently feels wary and abandoned and worries about being alone and isolated after breaking up her boyfriend Josh, with his penchant towards abusive behaviour. Rosalie, an ex-ballet dancer, almost "Darcy Bussell en pointe" in her looks is a woman who is gravity defying, desperate to become pregnant. Most shockingly, Ed refuses to accept the reality of his situation. While Rosalie has a very clear idea of how her life should proceed, constricting the poor Ed feels constricted, falling into a sexy affair with Alice, a girl from his office. Alice meet for quick drink. Buoyed by all of the sexual possibilities, sex with Alice is uncomplicated and fun, while sex with Rosalie has become a sort of marital rite, even an obligation.

Meanwhile, David experiences a familiar comfort, desperate to spend his remaining years in some way free of the material. He gives both his son and daughter a declaration of unequivocal love. Thus far in his life, he has successfully been comforted with his past, although his wife Nancy had an affair, she was more than willing to give him and her children support, to protect them all from the evils of the world. The generational wheel turns very quickly, even as the author includes a back-story of David's recollection of life in 1966 where he was never as happy as that summer in Rome and his friendship with Richard Burton "his eyes glistening with anguish." Along with his best friend Adam, this was the summer that formed their lives, where he too would be a professional actor and live in a vivid charged world. But everything gets tangled up in his doomed affair with a young blonde-headed Jenni who "attaches to him with the sensuous, slightly sinister insistence of a python."

But life is never as ordered as we would like. Certainly to David, the vortex effect of mortality all seems arbitrary and unfathomable. Meanwhile, the poor Rosalie suffers in silence, her childlessness almost biblical to her, with Ed aching to free himself the shackles of IVF, "this little place with its excruciatingly limited horizons and its banality." Then there's Lucy who is concerned that her father is going to sell their family home in Camden which she still thinks of the house as home. Lucy feels she should have been consulted before it was sold and sees this as a betrayal by her father. All have a manic edge an manic edge to their lives and a hint of desperation and all are craving the human texture, and are all part of its rich tapestry.

Then the revelations and the small, intimate betrayals come thick and fast and their lives are at once accelerated into chaos, but Cartwright handles it all with literary panache and in a characteristically British way, demonstrating a retributive cost. Full of meaningless provocations and loaded exchanges, these people are smart and educated and are quick to judge others. Besides there differences, there's this constant sense the Cross family are of one flesh with a shared understanding. The petty judgments and surprising treacheries thrust this novel forward to its conclusion and the family inevitably close rank against the mendacity of the outside world. The author's beloved London plays it's own part, a city layered in a kind of savvy and irony and tradition, and also that of a changing England with its immigration, multiculturalism and its blurred class distinctions. This novel abounds with power and zest, the Cross family's life and David's own choices deeply reflective of Cartwright's own rigorously intellectual debate on the struggles of modern life and the search for some sort of spiritual enlightenment in the contemporary age. Mike Leonard September 09.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Books set in England, May 24, 2010
This book was interesting for it's family dynamics and friendship relationships. There was a lot of swearing and "bad" language that seemed unnecessary in the context of the story. The part that takes place in Africa is interesting, but a bit disjointed. Altogether, I really didn't enjoy this book very much.
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