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Sweet Water [Hardcover]

Kathryn Kramer (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

August 18, 1998
In her powerfully engrossing new novel, Kathryn Kramer (called by the New York Times "a storyteller to whom we willingly submit") explores the American way of love via two romantic triangles. One is taking place now (a skeptical horsewoman, a passionate biographer, an international financier) and the other a hundred years ago, at the same Vermont resort hotel.
As the plot unfolds, the secrets embedded in the two romances work their way to the surface: newly discovered love letters, addressed in the last century to an earlier proprietress of the hotel, a Miss Lucinda Dearborn, not only turn out to be from America's greatest expatriate novelist but also point to Lucinda's unsuspected lifelong affair with another man.
In the present, mysterious events that occurred the winter the current owners of the hotel, Ned and Greta Dene, met as teenagers, threaten to overwhelm their lives once again when Greta's first and greatest love disappears in a plane crash and the priest who brought about their meeting reappears, as if on cue.
As the story progresses, the distance between what happened in the past and what is happening now begins to close, and Lucinda Dearborn's amazing and ultimately tragic story illuminates Greta and Ned's summer of crisis.
Sweet Water is a spacious novel, rich in event and the feel of America--Civil War boys returning from the fighting, the hotel's famous water cures, a woman galloping her horse across the hills, a Catholic priest who presides over a miracle he doesn't believe in, an old-fashioned diviner who goes looking for water and turns up the letters that set everything in motion.
It is also a literary detective story, a brilliant and gripping novel about the ways in which love can be fueled or destroyed by secrets, about the distances between men and women, and about the extraordinary and unexpected ways in which faith between them is engendered.

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

In Vermont a dowser detects a strongbox filled with diaries and letters, a cache that suggests that expatriate 19th-century novelist O. had a decades-long romance with American Lucinda Dearborn. These documents share some eerie parallels with the lives of the present owners of Thrush Hollow, the crumbling Vermont hotel Lucinda once ran. Ned and Greta Dene are experiencing subliminal marital difficulties. Greta's longtime lover, Crain, whom she believes to be the father of her son, Henry, has just died in a plane crash. Ned first met Greta in France when she was 16 and suffering from stigmata that erupted soon after a young Crain returned to Mexico to wed Julia. By the novel's end, Greta invites the widow Julia and her children to visit Thrush Hollow. The secrets Julia confides in Greta upend her world and her stigmata return. Ned, a historian by trade, recognizes the scholarly importance (and the tabloid potential) of the O. and Lucinda documents, but is reluctant to disclose their existence to the world at large. Kathryn Kramer confides to her readers what Lucinda did not record in her diaries--despite her intellectual devotion to O., she had a longstanding, zestily consummated affair with a local harness-maker, Zebulon Snow. It is only after Lucinda drowns herself, following O.'s death abroad, that Zeb discovers their union produced a stillborn child.

If all of this sounds fantastically complicated, well, it is. Secret upon secret unfurls as Kramer's Jamesian sentences meander toward the final period:

She had thought of how, once, the sea had covered the land, how its hollows and slopes had felt the sea's penetration and caress; no emptiness had been left unfilled, so that, ever since the water had receded, the brooks and rivers travelling to the sea had molded the hills with their longing to return, and everywhere the character of the land had been shaped by this striving: to go back, sweet water joining to salt, back to where neither knew where one stopped and the other began.
In this, her third novel, Kramer requires patience of her readers and rewards it with the byzantine intricacies of her fictional edifice. --Joyce Thompson

From Publishers Weekly

A former resort hotel in the rolling hills of Vermont links past and present entanglements in this ambitious and richly imagined tale of romantic intrigue. For 15 years, the Hotel Thrush Hollow has been the summer home of Greta and Ned Dene, who now discover love letters written to former owner Lucinda Dearborn, a beautiful, self-styled faith healer who inherited the place from her father in the 1870s. Lucinda's admirer is none other than the celebrated expatriate novelist O. It falls to Ned, a biographer, to decide whether he should reveal the human side of a writer who's known for his icy reserve. In reality, O.'s prudish refusal to enter into a physical relationship with Lucinda propelled her into the arms of a married neighbor with whom she sustained a secret passion of long duration. While Ned puzzles over his subject, Greta mourns the death of her longtime lover, Lars Crain, and considers revealing to Ned that their son Henry was actually fathered by Lars. Intending to confess all, Greta invites Lars's widow to Thrush Hollow, but when Julia Crain divulges a shocking secret of her own, Greta changes her mind. Given the heady mix that's gone before?including arranged marriages, ecclesiastical scandals, stigmata and faith healings?the ending seems pedestrian: Ned remains clueless, Henry returns from camp, Julia and Greta bond. Yet Kramer (Rattlesnake Farming) is a gifted stylist; her vivid characters (especially the Henry James caricature O.) and evocative prose propel the reader through the complexities of two distinct yet connected plots. She breathes life into two passionate women whose lives, though separated by a century, are intriguingly mirrored.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; 1st edition (August 18, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375400834
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375400834
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.7 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,222,812 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3.0 out of 5 stars An interesting near-miss, July 6, 2010
This review is from: Sweet Water (Hardcover)
An interesting near-miss by a Middlebury College professor with now and then stories set in a resort hotel in a remote valley in Vermont. The then story takes place from 1870 to 1915, focusing on the innkeeper's unmarried daughter who specializes in "water cures" and keeps the hotel running after her father's death. Not until a secret cache of letters and diaries is found almost a century later does anyone learn of Lucinda Dearborn's secret but celibate romance with O, an expatriate American novelist modeled on Henry James. The now story is circa-1998 contemporary, focusing on Greta Dene who with her husband has turned the decrepit resort hotel into a rambling summer home. Like Lucinda, Greta Dene has a secret lover whose accidental death sends her into an emotional tailspin which sets the plot in motion. I found the then story more compelling because the reticence of the characters to seize the day seemed more believable in Victorians. In the now story, Kramer crammed in so many separate elements of plot and character that the story felt disjointed to me. I never really clicked with any of the now characters, who seemed weirdly out-of-time - their emotional baggage seemed more in keeping with the Victorian era than the late 20th century. The book starts very slowly - tons of interior monologue and no action to speak of - but really picks up in the second half, suggesting that Kramer might be able to appeal to a more commercial audience if she can figure out how to make something happen while she's setting up her story.
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Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Sweet Water, Thrush Hollow, Sister Mary Catherine, Trout Hill, Miss Dearborn, Lucinda Dearborn, West Stilling, Priscilla Thwaite, Zebulun Snow, Captain Dearborn, Hudson Sleeper, Ned Dene, Nora Sleeper, Miss Brooke, Anna Sayre, New Hampshire, Venerable Bede, Miss Swallow, Miss Sayre, New York, Cathedral Street, Rufus Dearborn, United States, Second World War, Dalby Gazette
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