This Is The Water
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- 4,49 €
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- 4,49 €
Publisher Description
'Addictive... A delicious mix of sexual reawakening and moral entanglement' Telegraph
'A gifted storyteller with an unusual, hypnotic voice... truly original, it casts a spell that lingers in your mind' Daily Mail
This is a novel about a woman. About a mother. About a marriage.
About a murder.
In the brightly lit public pool the killer swims and watches. Amongst the mothers cheering on their swim team daughters is Annie. Watching her two girls race, she's thinking of other things. Her husband's emotional distance. Her lost brother. The man she's drawn to.
Then she learns a terrible secret. Now her everyday cares and concerns seem meaningless. Annie knows she has to act. Above all, she must protect her children.
Compulsively readable, it takes readers on a journey where none could guess the final outcome.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
With her obscenely suspenseful latest, Murphy (The Call, named one of PW s best books of 2011), who is known for her stylistic experimentation, tries out a second-person perspective and a continual this is structure that takes some getting used to, but that works thanks to the fact that the author breaks up the book into 48 short chapters. You are Annie, a New England mom driving your two daughters to and from swim meets, married to an emotionally aloof husband whose encyclopedic mind and frequent recitations of factual tidbits drive you crazy. But you, the novel s protagonist, don t know everything that you, the reader, know for instance, only the reader knows the identity of a serial killer scoping out potential next victims on the swim team. Therefore the book s real tension centers on which of the characters will uncover the killer first, making this inverted murder mystery a whogotit rather than a whodunit. Potential detectives include the beautiful Chris, a fellow swim team parent; her husband, Paul, whom Annie develops a crush on; Mandy, the facility janitor; and even the unlikely Dinah, one of the more amusing characters a villain of the judgmental suburban mom variety. Though the novel starts off galloping, it does slow in the middle as Annie s thoughts become tiresomely repetitive (she dwells on Paul to distract herself from recurring memories of her brother s suicide, even after Paul reveals to her his secret connection to the ongoing murders). But in Murphy s hands, the structure becomes almost hypnotic and when the story hits full speed in the final quarter, the suspense becomes almost excruciating.