Sister Water (Landscapes of Childhood)

$18.99
by Nancy Willard

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The widowed Jessie Woolman, now in her seventies, her two married daughters, Ellen and Martha, and two grandchildren live in Ann Arbor, where the family owns a museum that harbors a meandering stream and historical artifacts of the region bounded by the rivers. Just as Jessie's aging mind begins to wander, Ellen's husband dies in a car accident and the Woolman family begins a new journey led by two very different men: Harvey Mack, a developer with an eye on the Woolman property and the grieving Ellen, and Sam Theopolis, a mystic hired to care for Jessie. Sam becomes both Harvey's rival and a healing presence for the family until a crisis descends and he, too, needs the protection of the Woolmans' innocent belief in the saving power of love. Combining sorrow and grief with considerable light-hearted wit and eccentric characters, Sister Water is a novel that will reach old and young readers alike. Through her lyrical prose, author Nancy Willard draws on the rich style of magical realism to create a narrative flow that is at once powerful and seductive. Important to the Landscapes of Childhood series, this novel raises significant questions about the state of childhood and how that state affects adult sensibilities. "Willard's invention and lyricism, the splash of her wit, the glancing slyness of her dialogue, all have the fresh breath of a first-rate winner."― New York Times Book Review "Willard's gift for seamlessly mixing the magical and the mundane puts her in the company of Anne Tyler. . . . Here she fashions a moving story about a family in crisis and the power of love to transcend reality."― Publishers Weekly "Imagine Marc Chagall as a novelist-creating works entirely of gorgeous, sunlit water and magical, poignant creatures-and you'll have an idea what it's like to read Sister Water."― Chicago Tribune "Captivating. . . . A luminous, lyrical novel about familial love and loss that almost literally hums with the power of her language."― New York Times "Willard's literary gifts grace this novel with a remarkable immanence. . . . Once immersed in the Woolmans' lives, the pure and magical state of being that surrounds these perfectly drawn characters surrounds the reader, as well."― Booklist "Lilting, wacky, wistful. . . Willard possesses a delightfully wry voice, but she also has an ear for whimsy. Fiction lovers who don't quite believe in wings might take a chance on this novel anyhow: Only dedicated stone hearts will get to the end without melting, just a little bit."―Los Angeles Times "Willard's invention and lyricism, the splash of her wit, the glancing slyness of her dialogue, all have the fresh breath of a first-rate winner."— "Willard's gift for seamlessly mixing the magical and the mundane puts her in the company of Anne Tyler. . . . Here she fashions a moving story about a family in crisis and the power of love to transcend reality."— "Imagine Marc Chagall as a novelist-creating works entirely of gorgeous, sunlit water and magical, poignant creatures-and you'll have an idea what it's like to read Sister Water."— "Captivating. . . . A luminous, lyrical novel about familial love and loss that almost literally hums with the power of her language."— "Willard's literary gifts grace this novel with a remarkable immanence. . . . Once immersed in the Woolmans' lives, the pure and magical state of being that surrounds these perfectly drawn characters surrounds the reader, as well."— "Lilting, wacky, wistful. . . Willard possesses a delightfully wry voice, but she also has an ear for whimsy. Fiction lovers who don't quite believe in wings might take a chance on this novel anyhow: Only dedicated stone hearts will get to the end without melting, just a little bit."—Los Angeles Times An absorbing story about childhood and the search for a sense of place in the urban and natural environments of the Midwest. The widowed Jessie Woolman, now in her seventies, her two married daughters, Ellen and Martha, and two grandchildren live in Ann Arbor, where the family owns a museum that harbors a meandering stream and historical artifacts of the region bounded by the rivers. Just as Jessie’s aging mind begins to wander, Ellen’s husband dies in a car accident and the Woolman family begins a new journey led by two very different men: Harvey Mack, a developer with an eye on the Woolman property and the grieving Ellen, and Sam Theopolis, a mystic hired to care for Jessie. Sam becomes both Harvey’s rival and a healing presence for the family until a crisis descends and he, too, needs the protection of the Woolmans’ innocent belief in the saving power of love. Combining sorrow and grief with considerable light-hearted wit and eccentric characters, Sister Water is a novel that will reach old and young readers alike. Through her lyrical prose, author Nancy Willard draws on the rich style of magical realism to create a narrative flow that is at once powerful and seductive. Important to the Landscapes of Childhood seri

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