Stillwater
A Novel
-
- £7.99
-
- £7.99
Publisher Description
In 1938, five towns in western Massachusetts were flooded to create a huge reservoir.
In this beautifully rendered novel of coming of age, of loyalty and betrayal, good and evil, and of bravery and an abiding love, Stillwater marks a significant literary step forward for William Weld in what has already emerged as a notable writing career.
Fifteen-year-old Jamieson, who lives on a farm with his ironic and strong-willed grandmother, watches life unravel for the men and women whose world is about to be obliterated. Some take refuge in whiskey or denial, some give in to despair, some preach hypocrisy -- and some decide to turn a profit on their fellow citizens' misfortunes.
Jamieson falls in love for the first and hardest time with the unforgettable Hannah, a dreamy girl from the poor farm. She enriches his sense of what is being lost by recalling lives that were lived in the Valley during the French and Indian War, the insurrection of Daniel Shays, and the War between the States. Jamieson feels in his bones that the living are surrounded by the dead.
As the seasons turn during the towns' final year, events spin out of control. Church services are supplanted by pagan rituals in the woods, public morality is undone by the exposure of a "disorderly house," and any semblance of a normal life on the farms is undermined by the impending flood. In September, the hurricane of 1938 completes the Valley's destruction.
As Jamieson is losing the world of his boyhood, it is Hannah who opens his eyes to wider possibilities and helps him taste a measure of revenge on the men who sold out the Valley towns. It is not so difficult, after all, for the living and the dead to change places.
Weld has been praised by the New York Times for his "writer's eye and ear." Stillwater illuminates nature's magnificence, man's inhumanity, people's courage, and the destiny of place that is characteristic of America.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The coldhearted malice of self-serving political deception undermines life in a bucolic farm valley during the Depression in this historical drama by the former governor of Massachusetts. The fictional Swift River Valley in western Massachusetts is home to five small farm towns with a rebellious history, and Huck Finn heaven for the orphaned narrator, Jamieson Kooby, and his tomboy friend from the state poorhouse, Hannah Corkery. Jamieson, who lives with his savvy widowed grandmother on the Hardiman family farm, is 15 the summer it is revealed that the valley is to be flooded for a reservoir/dam construction boondoggle railroaded through the state legislature by the Boston political machine. Grandma's romance with local leader Doc Crocker and her association with the town clerk, her brother-in-law, make her kitchen the meeting place to hatch resistance to the plan. But when a construction crew shows up to clear land for the dam, even Jamieson and his grandmother must admit defeat. Events accelerate as the doomed valley is readied for submersion, and murder and betrayal end Jamieson's childhood forever. Weld (Mackerel by Moonlight) aims subtle barbs under the cover of rural charm, crafting a folksy tale that makes it clear rural schemes enriching distant politicos don't occur without local collusion. Memorable characters, smooth prose and true period tone with an edge of menace make this a splendid read.