After I finished This Is The Water, I went over to Goodreads
to see what others are saying about it. And the overwhelming response seems to
be that people want fewer details about
swimming.
I want there to be MORE details about swimming.
At its best, this book is a close look at perfectionism. The
main character(s) wishes she had the perfect marriage (she doesn’t). She wishes
that she were the perfect mother (she’s not). She wishes that she had perfect
beauty (nope). All of this striving takes place in the context of a children’s
swim team, where the kids are working daily to acquire perfect form and achieve
the perfect time, to win big without celebrating, to lose without crying, to
fit into the perfect suit that looks right and fits right and propels them to
new achievement.
However, the compelling swimming storyline is tangled
together with a serial killer storyline. A serial killer, known to the reader, is
sitting in the stands thinking serial killer thoughts and planning terrible things.
I don’t know why this has to be a serial killer book. Perhaps it is to show
that you never really know what’s under the surface of a person (Get it?
Swimming? Under the surface of the water?).
In any case, it feels unnecessary to me, and I don’t think that the
serial killer goings-on are fully believable.
(But here’s an important takeaway: if you know that someone
is murdering people at rest stops along the highway at night, PLEASE stop to
pee at McDonalds instead).
The other interesting thing that some readers are discussing
is the writing style. The author starts every section – sometimes every
paragraph – with “This is…” Here’s an example:
This is the facility. The long shafts of sunlight that come
in through the windows and hit the water on sunny days. The showers whose
pressure is weak, whose tiles need brush-cleaning in the grout. This is Dinah
after her daughter Jessie doesn’t win the race. Dinah is sitting back down on
the bleachers in the stands. She is comparing the time to the last time Jessie
swam that event. She is telling herself at least her daughter beat her previous
record. This is how much she beat it by: one one-hundredth of a second.
This is the racing suit some of the swimmers wear. It feels
like the skin of a shark, when rubbed the wrong way. Rubbed the right way it’s
smooth and gives you the feeling that you can beat your old times, that you can
beat anyone’s times….
Once I sank into the novel, this cadence didn’t bother me.
It is actually a unique way to shift perspectives and to make the reader feel
like SHE is in the stands watching things happen. But it does remind me a
bit of a children’s book my boys read when they were preschoolers, called Pizza Pat.
Pizza Pat is a twist on the nursery rhyme, "This Is the House That Jack Built," and it has lines like
this one:
This is the sauce all gooey and gloppy that covered the
dough all stretchy and floppy that lay in the tray that Pat bought.
And it repeats, over and over, with a new “This is…” line on
each page. Unfortunately, I have that rhyme back in my head after a nice 8-year
hiatus, and I am filled with a tiny bit of rage.
While I think that this book is trying to be too many things at once, I did enjoy it. It was a relaxing read after a trying week. It would
be great for a long plane ride (but not a car trip, especially if you plan to
pee at rest stops along the way).
2 comments:
Rage! --Recently the Mary Poppins' "Let's Go Fly a Kite" embedded itself in my brain. And now I will have The House That Jack Built to get it out. Thank you.
I'm glad I can be of service!
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