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The Swimming Pool [Hardcover]

Holly LeCraw (Author)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (52 customer reviews)

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Love, Betrayal, and Tragedy
Read the first chapter and download a free reading group guide to Swimming Pool by Holly LeCraw [PDF].

Book Description

April 6, 2010
A heartbreaking affair, an unsolved murder, an explosive romance: welcome to summer on the Cape in this powerful debut.

Seven summers ago, Marcella Atkinson fell in love with Cecil McClatchey, a married father of two. But on the same night their romance abruptly ended, Cecil's wife was found murdered—and their lives changed forever. The case was never solved, and Cecil died soon after, an uncharged suspect.

Now divorced and estranged from her only daughter, Marcella lives alone, mired in grief and guilt. Meanwhile, Cecil's grown son, Jed, returns to the Cape with his sister for the first time in years. One day he finds a woman's bathing suit buried in a closet—a relic, unbeknownst to him, of his father's affair—and, on a hunch, confronts Marcella. When they fall into an affair of their own, their passion temporarily masks the pain of the past, but also leads to crises and revelations they never could have imagined.

In what is sure to be the debut of the season, The Swimming Pool delivers a sensuous narrative of such force and depth that you won't be able to put it down.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Holly LeCraw on The Swimming Pool

I’m a Southerner born and bred, and I grew up going to the beach for a couple of weeks every year in South Carolina, where the water is as warm as your bath, the pace is slow, and the fake-bamboo furniture is comfortable. Then, after a move to Boston that still baffles even me, I met my husband, who summered. (In all fairness, his family would be loath to use that word; nevertheless, when you decamp to the coast for the entire summer, every summer, that’s summering.) Moreover, they summered on Cape Cod, in a very old house built to withstand howling winter winds (small windows, fireplaces, and low ceilings), and where the decor was not, um, tropical. The water was often freezing. The air was often freezing. In August.

As I’ve begun talking to people about my debut novel, The Swimming Pool, I’ve noticed that one of the most popular questions people ask is “Where did you get the idea for your book?” and that, often, what they are really asking is, “Is it autobiographical?” It’s hard to believe that writers make up stories out of thin air, and for good reason: they don’t. Somewhere, in every book, there are elements hidden of the writer, of the writer’s family, the writer’s history and experience. The best description I have heard is “refracted autobiography”--emphasis on refracted. For instance, The Swimming Pool is the story of a young man, Jed McClatchey, who is mired in grief for his parents, who died seven years previously--his mother in a still-unsolved break-in/murder. Jed falls in love and begins an affair with an older woman, Marcella Atkinson, who he then learns was his late father’s mistress; as one might imagine, complications and revelations ensue.

Now. I am happily married. My parents are both alive. I don’t know anyone who was murdered. I am not Italian (Marcella is). I don’t know any cougars personally. It is all made up.

Except for the fact that this book is set on Cape Cod, and Marcella, an expatriate from a warm and sunny clime, is mystified by it. And except that Jed, who just happens to be a Southerner, has grown up summering there. Which is not usual for a boy from Atlanta. One might say that I have split myself between my two protagonists: I have the woman who feels like a constant outsider; I have the man who loves being somewhere different, who knows how different it is from his birthplace and yet who gets it. Because I think I finally get the Cape, after twenty-something years. Or maybe I just get it enough to fake it. I can still stand a bit outside. I can see it clearly, in a way that it is sometimes hard for me to see the places where I grew up.

It is the quintessential stance of the writer: you’ve got to blend in. You’ve got to pass. You’ve got to get people to forget that you’re watching, hard. And, really, they shouldn’t be nervous; the things writers notice, or that I notice, anyway, are not the things one might expect. In this case, there was a story I heard long ago about a family I barely knew, where the middle--aged husband left his high-school-sweetheart wife--a sad, but garden-variety, occurrence. For some reason, it stuck in my head. And then it combined with the feel of the sun beating down on a clay tennis court in the woods (a court I decidedly watched from the outside; I couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn with a tennis ball), with the cast-in-amber interior of a beloved old Yankee house, and with the sort of crime one might read about in the newspaper and then promptly forget. My own experience with postpartum depression was given to a secondary character, and intensified. My one trip ever to the Connecticut coast yielded a place for Marcella’s escape. And on and on.

Where did I get the idea for the book? I have no idea. Is it autobiographical? Of course not. Of course.

As it happens, I still get to go to South Carolina occasionally, often in August, when I can sweat to my heart’s content. As it also happens, I wrote much of the book on the Cape. I belong to both places, and to neither. As a writer, it’s better that way. --Holly LeCraw

(Photo © Marion Ettlinger)


From Publishers Weekly

Strong writing keeps the reader sucked in to LeCraw's painful family drama debut. The lovely Marcella is reeling from tragedy; her ex-husband, Anthony, has sent Toni, their only daughter, away to boarding school and on to college. The man with whom Marcella had an affair, Cecil McClatchey, dies in a car accident soon after his wife, Betsy, is murdered. Amid the wreckage is Cecil's daughter, Callie, fighting for her sanity with two young children, and his son, Jed, who, desperate to fill the void left by the death of his parents, seeks answers from Marcella only to begin a tortured love affair with her as she drowns in guilt, struggling to find some meaning to hold on to. As Marcella comes closer to the truth about Betsy's murder and Cecil's death, and mindful that she is now the lover of Cecil's son, she struggles and fails to gather strength enough to make any decision, right or wrong. It is a story of deep and searing love, between siblings and lovers, but most powerfully, between parents and their children. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Doubleday; 1 edition (April 6, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385531931
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385531931
  • Product Dimensions: 6.4 x 1.2 x 9.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (52 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #868,503 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

52 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (52 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rippling effects of family secrets, April 9, 2010
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This review is from: The Swimming Pool (Hardcover)
I've seen early reviews of this book that call it many things to many people: beach reading. Airplane reading. Neither of them are true, at least not in the cliched sense. This book rises above easy categorization.

"Beach reading" carries certain connotations -- chiefly, an active plot and lightweight prose -- which is only true here as regards the plot, because the writing is lyrical and complex. The story is an active read, vivid and engrossing. The plot, without giving anything away, centers on an affair, a murder that has taken place in the past, and a second affair (this time, edgily, with the SON of the man with whom the woman had the first affair). But it's not your typical May-December romance, and it is the rippling repercussions of the family secrets that give the story depth and nuance, and made it interesting to me.

Here's why: The subtlety of the writer's perceptions, and expression of each character's grief and needs, provide the depth that kept me rooted and reading. The family relationships -- parents to their children, siblings to one another and to the memories of their deceased parents -- are rich. The resolution of the mystery at the end is important, but for me wasn't the most important thing: It was seeing the conflicted emotions and baggage of each character, which sidesteps easy judgments of people making poor decisions.
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Life In The Deep End, April 6, 2010
This review is from: The Swimming Pool (Hardcover)
While a brief synopsis of Holly Lecraw's debut might lure you into believing that "The Swimming Pool" is a steamy summer page-turner--it is, in fact, something far more intriguing. Beginning with an unlikely and dangerous affair, Lecraw charts a turbulent, but inevitable, path that rips apart two families. But more important than the crimes of the flesh and their immediate repercussions, "The Swimming Pool" picks up years later with a haunting story of loss, regret, and those damaged in the wake of past events. In a surprisingly subtle narrative, Lecraw interweaves past and present to create a disturbingly candid portrait of individuals caught up in deceit and emotional crisis.

The driving force of "The Swimming Pool" is provided by a modern day liaison between Marcella Atkinson and Jed McClatchey. Marcella and Jed's father had an assignation of their own in the past, and it is this knowledge that draws Jed to Marcella initially. They find something surprising and redemptive together, but due to history--it's hard to imagine that anything will ever be validated publicly. For Marcella's affair with Jed's father had serious consequences--one of which may or may not have been the murder of his mother. With Jed's father dying shortly thereafter and Marcella's own marriage disintegrating at about the same time, there is much to regret. And these regrets keep Marcella and Jed's relationship a secret by necessity--both from Marcella's estranged husband and daughter and Jed's unstable sister.

I tried not to make "The Swimming Pool" sound lurid, but with only limited success. But don't be put off--it is, in fact, a tasteful examination of responsibility and family. All of the characters are well drawn and each is, knowingly or not, tied inextricably to the events of a summer many years ago. Delicately rendered, "The Swimming Pool" makes a powerful and compelling case that to extricate ourselves from a web of lies is infinitely harder than to choose correctly in the first place. It is these foibles that make us human. But they also have the power to wreak havoc on those we hold dear. Lecraw doesn't shy away from showing this damage, and this provides the heart and soul of her memorable book.
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22 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Tiptoes over the line into the realm of the maudlin, April 16, 2010
This review is from: The Swimming Pool (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Some books that I read draw me in so thoroughly that the struggles, hopes, fears, and tragedies of the characters become my own. I feel linked to those characters, emotionally invested in them, and I continue to read in the hopes that they will resolve their problems in the end. Then, there are other books that, during the process of reading them, make me want to reach into the pages and shake some sense into the characters. I become impatient with the blindness of those characters, irritated with their inability to see what is right before them. The Swimming Pool belongs to that latter group.

The writing of The Swimming Pool was very deep, and I often felt that the author was really walking a fine line, but I also felt that, ultimately, she crossed it. I could certainly identify with why the characters felt as they did, but their emotions sometimes just struck me as over the top. To be fair, as a reader, we are very much inside the heads of these characters, and it's fair to say that if we could actually be inside the head of another human being--say, our neighbor--we might find that what's in there is shockingly more dramatic than what is on the outside. Still, while I think the psychology described was conceivable, I couldn't suspend my disbelief, particularly when it came to the character of Callie. It is so obvious that she is just not right, and yet her brother and husband don't do anything about it. While I can understand wanting to bury your head in the sand when faced with something unpleasant, I found myself becoming really angry with Jed and with Billy for their inertia.

Which leads me to the real problem I had with this book: I just didn't connect with any of the characters. There was no point where I felt like I was really seeing things through their eyes. Instead, I felt like an observer. I couldn't really sympathize with any of the characters, and so their behavior was just frustrating. I'm not sure any of the characters were meant to be entirely sympathetic, but they pretty much all felt just very self-indulgent to me. This was so true that when a big secret is revealed, I was utterly unsurprised by it. And, yet, I didn't actively dislike the characters either, really. This is where the book really failed for me. By leaving me unable to engage with the characters, either by liking them or disliking them, I was ultimately indifferent to the novel as a whole.

The plot was also, to me, quite contrived. It felt like each event that happened was created specifically to enhance the drama even more. I would have found it a lot more interesting had more of the events struck me as coincidental. Instead, it felt to me as if the novel was written in such a way that its outcome was preordained and everything that happened before it was a building block in that construction. While I certainly think that most authors have a conclusion in mind when they write, it is necessary for me, as a reader, to feel like the plot grows organically and for it to take me in unexpected directions. That didn't happen for me with this book because everything felt rather formulaic. LeCraw does write well, but her writing is overshadowed by the shortcomings of this novel.
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