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64 of 66 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Two Lives, Two Tragedies
The prequel to "The Last Time They Met," this is by far the better book. It provides a great deal of insight into the character of Thomas, the melancholy and ultimately doomed hero of the latter. And it also poses, I believe, an interesting question: Is tragedy predestined?

It certainly seems so in the two intertwined stories told in this book. The first,...

Published on November 4, 2002 by Wendy Kaplan

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50 of 54 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Holds your interest, but loses your sympathy
Having read several other people's reviews of this novel while I was reading it, I generally agree with most of their criticisms. "Weight of Water" has a fascinating premise--a photojournalist goes back to the scene of an 1800's crime in New England in which two women were murdered on an isolated island, while one woman managed to escape. The story shifts back...
Published on June 5, 2001 by K. Schwarting


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64 of 66 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Two Lives, Two Tragedies, November 4, 2002
This review is from: The Weight of Water (Paperback)
The prequel to "The Last Time They Met," this is by far the better book. It provides a great deal of insight into the character of Thomas, the melancholy and ultimately doomed hero of the latter. And it also poses, I believe, an interesting question: Is tragedy predestined?

It certainly seems so in the two intertwined stories told in this book. The first, based on dual murders that actually took place in the 1800s, is the story of a Norwegian woman who is transplanted to a desolate and uninhabited New England island by her fisherman husband, there to live for many years with little or no human companionship under the harshest of circumstances. Her life is so rigid, so devoid of any tenderness or care, so barren (the fact that she cannot conceive a child is a metaphor for her entire existence) that her ultimate tragedy seems inevitable.

The second story is that of Thomas, a poet whose entire ouvre is limited to one collection of brilliant poems, an outpouring of grief and emotion about his first love, tragically killed in a car accident. Married to a photojournalist, Jean, Thomas seems half a person--desperately trying to regain his art, but in his way as barren as Maren, the lonely Norwegian wife. His only real joy is his and Jean's precocious and adorable 5-year-old daughter, Billie, whose mere existence has kept her parents in their difficult marriage. As Thomas and Billie accompany Jean on a photo assignment that will document the historic facts of the murders that changed a small group of Norwegian immigrants forever, Thomas seems to be unraveling. Situated with the others on a schooner piloted by his brother, Rich, Thomas seems to be a cypher, only alive in brief spurts punctuated by interactions with Billie and Rich's flirtatious girlfriend.

The steady unraveling of Thomas's sanity (and thus his marriage), juxtaposed against the story of Maren's own unraveling, makes for a heavy reading experience. And yet the book is so well written, and so insightful, that it moves along very quickly toward its inevitable and tragic ending.

Highly recommended, especially when paired with "The Last Time They Met," which should be read second, although I inadvertently reversed the order.

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41 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Our Reading Club's First Book Selection, November 26, 1999
By 
L. Forman "Book Lover" (Weymouth, MA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Weight of Water (Paperback)
Having just created a Reading Club with 14 women of diverse backgrounds, ages, and Ethnicity, this book proved to be an excellent choice. Chosen predominantly because of the author's prior work and recommendations from this site, it yielded an invigorating read by sweeping the reader into two different stories set within one novel. Although at times I found the constant transitioning from the current day story to the SmuttyNose Murder story disruptive, I soon realized there was a reason for this style of writing and that perhaps Shreve was trying to lead the reader to some story parallel's. I was quite surprised that so much of the novel involved the actual historical story of the SmuttyNose Murders. I enjoyed this immensely as it kept the reader questioning the outcome of the investigation even centuries later. This book had much discussion material and I would recommend it for a group if interesting and lively discussion is what you are seeking. I look forward to reading more of her works.
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50 of 54 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Holds your interest, but loses your sympathy, June 5, 2001
This review is from: The Weight of Water (Paperback)
Having read several other people's reviews of this novel while I was reading it, I generally agree with most of their criticisms. "Weight of Water" has a fascinating premise--a photojournalist goes back to the scene of an 1800's crime in New England in which two women were murdered on an isolated island, while one woman managed to escape. The story shifts back and forth (with little notice to the reader, but the transitions aren't difficult to follow) between the present-day story of Jean, the photojournalist, who is boating to this island with her husband, her brother-in-law and his attractive girlfriend, and her young daughter, and the story of the murder.

Based on true events, the murder is narrated by the survivor, Maren, who wrote a narrative document that Jean pinches from the local historical society. The tension of Maren's story concerns her loveless marriage, her frail (at best) relationships with her sister Karen and her sister-in-law Anethe, and her deep love for her brother Evan.

BOTH stories have the potential to be interesting. I began the novel with high hopes. However, neither story really pays off. For the whodunit to work, there would need to be more tension. You start to suspect the murderer's true identity too early, and ultimately you find that none of the characters in this story are very sympathetic. Plus, a key element to caring about this story is to know more about why Maren adores her brother so much--we get a very veiled hint, and that's about it.

The present-day story also suffers from a lack of sympathetic characters. Jean is interesting, but when her character stumbles (I won't reveal how) late in the novel, the question is WHY she reacts in this manner rather than delving deeper into her problems with her poet husband. The brother-in-law and his girlfriend come across as too one-dimensional, although they are supposed to be pivotal characters in the relationship between Jean and her husband.

A lot happens in this novel--a murder story is resolved, Jean comes to a point of personal crisis, and a death occurs in Jean's story (again, I won't tell you who). But the narrative is so flat (and slow, at times) that it's difficult to remain attentive, much less sympathetic.

I can't imagine not finishing this book once you start it, but it's difficult to imagine being drawn in by any of these characters.

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25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Quick and Easy Read!, July 18, 2000
This review is from: The Weight of Water (Hardcover)
This was a very enjoyable book. I read it in about two days. The plot was pretty suspenseful, and the way it was written really hooks you in and makes you want to keep on reading! I liked the historical references and murder-mystery plot, and I found the fictional parts of the novel to be interesting as well. I find the author to be a very good writer and look forward to reading more books by Anita Shreve. If I could change one thing about the book, it would be to make the transition between the fictional character Jean's thoughts and the historical character Maren's tale a bit more seamless. At times the switchover was very choppy and abrupt, without even a change of paragraph. Of course, perhaps the author wrote it this way because she was trying to show how intertwined and tangled-up Jean was becoming in Maren's tale, and how Jean couldn't separate her own emotional angst from the historical character's due to the fact that she identified so closely with her. This book was about love, jealousy, choices, and betrayal (but not in the way that you'd think!). I believe many women would enjoy this book and I recommend it to all.
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating, December 27, 1999
This review is from: The Weight of Water (Paperback)
This was my first time reading something from Shreve, and I will read her again. I like how she goes back and forth between the story lines, with simultaneous climaxes of both stories. You can feel the oppression of the women as you read. Very absorbing, I highly recommend it.
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24 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another Masterpiece from the Master, November 30, 1999
This review is from: The Weight of Water (Paperback)
Anita Shreve writes hauntingly beautiful books about important moments in our lives. The Weight of Water is a bewitching tale that most probably rings a bell in every woman's life.

Hasn't every woman imagined her loved one having an affiar - seen the signs and been absolutely sure but been wrong (we hope)? Anita weaves these feelings in amidst a haunting tale of murder and intrigue from the 1800's.

I have read all of Anita's books but this was definitely one of my favorites. I found it hard to put down and I also responded to many of the main characters emotions - many times I wished I could reach into the book and shake her.

Shreve is destined to be one of this generations best novelists!

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22 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Moody and atmospheric story within a story., June 10, 2001
This review is from: The Weight of Water (Paperback)
I have read a number of Anita Shreve's books, and "The Weight of Water" resembles her other works in several ways. Shreve relies heavily on the atmosphere of the New England coast to set the mood of her novels. In "The Weight of Water," the setting is the Isles of Shoals, an archipelago near the coast of New Hampshire. The rocky and forbidding landscape, with its harsh weather and sudden squalls, is a mirror of the characters' stormy and often destructive feelings and actions. "The Weight of Water" follows a few days in the life Jean and Thomas Janes, a married couple who have become insecure in their relationship with one another. They, along with their young daughter Billie, are on a boat belonging to Rich, Thomas's brother, and Adaline, Rich's girlfriend. Jean, a photographer, is on assignment, taking photographs of a site on the Isles of Shoals where two Norwegian immigrant women were brutally murdered in 1873. Jean finds a diary written by a survivor of the murder, and this diary serves as a backdrop for the events of the present time.

The story of the Norwegian woman who survives the murders, Maren Christensen Hontvedt, is a compelling one. Maren emigrates to America reluctantly with her husband, John. Shreve, through Maren's diary, beautifully portrays Maren's emotional torment as she leaves her native land and sets up house in this inhospitable climate. Later, Maren and John are joined by other members of their families. How did Maren's sister-in-law and sister come to be brutally murdered one horrible night? Shreve gives her own interpretation to these events, and it is ghastly as well as mesmerizing. The "main" story of Thomas and Jean cannot compete with the "secondary" story of Maren and her family in terms of emotional resonance and intensity. Still "The Weight of Water" is notable for Shreve's mapping of the landscape of the Isle of Shoals as well as of the human heart. Why do we destroy ourselves and others? How much suffering can we take before we snap? Shreve is an expert at dissecting the fragile heart of a woman.

This book is a companion piece to "The Last Time They Met," Shreve's latest novel, since both books deal with the life of Thomas Janes.

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Almost convinced, January 21, 2000
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This review is from: The Weight of Water (Paperback)
I was completely wrapped up in this book until the ending. The double story was effectively told, the tension was exquisitely done between characters, and the author was highly skilled at switching voice when writing from the diary entries of the woman who survived the brutal murders at the story's center. Shreve's sentence structure in the journal entries reminded me of Melville in their complexity and balance. At the book's end, however, I felt the handling of the plot involving the present day half of the story was truncated...that the inevitable tensions and insights were dropped in their follow-through by a convenient ending that left me dissatisfied. I felt that there was much potential in what had come before that was then taken off the reader's plate before the meal was brought to a proper end. I would still recommend this book to others, but I was not convinced of the ending itself, nor of the way the author chose to handle it.
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19 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Is this really the edge?, August 7, 2000
This review is from: The Weight of Water (Paperback)
I'm kind of at a loss as to how to start-this was definitely a unique book. I don't think I've read another quite like it. The author took a true murder story and built this novel around it, adding a parallel story of a current day character. I liked that. Although the transitions (or lack thereof) between the murder plot and the modern plot were quick and without warning, I did finally get used to it. The book kept me interested - I did look forward to picking it back up. I didn't, however, see the main character as being "pushed to the edge," nor did I see the climax on the boat as being something that she, ultimately, was responsible for. I felt a little betrayed by the very ending - I didn't feel that such a dramatic conclusion was necessary. I would suggest for anyone considering reading this book, that they check up on the actual historical accounts of the Smuttynose murders. It adds to the experience of reading the book, knowing that some of the characters were real people.
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Surprisingly good after The Pilot's Wife, October 23, 1999
This review is from: The Weight of Water (Paperback)
Don't get me wrong. Anita Shreve is a marvelous writer. A first rate story teller, she draws you into her books. But the Pilot's Wife, though well written, was melodramatic and depressing--much to much so for me. The Weight of Water, although it deals with heavy issues like death and adultery, had me completely immersed. Her train-of-thought method of relating past and present events kept my interest until the very last word. Here is a book I found hard to put down.

So if The Pilot's Wife wasn't your cup of tea, give Ms. Shreve another chance with The Weight of Water!!

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