Water
A haunting, confronting novel from the author of The Heart’s Invisible Furies
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- €7.99
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- €7.99
Publisher Description
‘Subtle, intelligent and humane’ Sunday Telegraph
'Boyne not only opens up conversations, he writes beautifully and sensitively' Woman&Home
‘A perceptive, moving exploration of guilt, grief and complicity’ Sunday Express
‘Boyne does not put a foot wrong in this masterly novella’ Mail on Sunday
'An intriguing investigation of contemporary trauma... [a] short but powerful book' Guardian
'His quietest novel... but one just as powerful as his larger canvases' Business Post
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From million-copy-bestselling author John Boyne comes a masterfully reflective story about one woman coming to terms with the demons of her past and finding a new path forward.
The first thing Vanessa Carvin does when she arrives on the island is change her name. To the locals, she is Willow Hale, a solitary outsider escaping Dublin to live a hermetic existence in a small cottage, not a notorious woman on the run from her past.
But scandals follow like hunting dogs. And she has some questions of her own to answer. If her ex-husband is really the monster everyone says he is, then how complicit was she in his crimes?
Escaping her old life might seem like a good idea but the choices she has made throughout her marriage have consequences. Here, on the island, Vanessa must reflect on what she did - and did not do. Only then can she discover whether she is worthy of finding peace at all.
Can you ever truly wash away your past?
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What readers are saying:
'A scorching, devastating tale'
'Powerful, challenging and beautifully written’
'Compelling, propulsive, and completely immersive’
'Written with the same emotional intensity and thought provoking honesty as his longer works’
'Packs a hard hitting punch with its depth of emotional understanding of what it is to be human’
'What an astoundingly brilliant piece of writing this is . . . by its end you feel as though you have read something much more epic in length'
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
An unsettling, contemplative novel, Water follows a middle-aged woman as she arrives on an Irish island, cuts off all her hair, changes her name, and attempts to make sense of her past. The nature of what she is hiding, though its exact dimensions are not fully elucidated until well into the book, is no huge mystery. The novel is more subtle than that, and more potent for it. As she recalls, from her fairly bare existence on the island, the gilded life she once lived in Dublin and how it fell apart, a sense of dread builds precisely because the reader feels they already know the shape of the tragedy and the scandal that will soon be revealed. Water is about her attempts to wrestle with her proximity to truly evil acts, and the loss they led to, while assessing her old self—glamorous, perhaps superficial, perhaps unhappy too—for signs of complicity.