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Up Through the Water

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
New York Times Notable Book: A single mother is torn between two men in this "beautifully written" novel set on North Carolina's Ocracoke Island (The New York Times).
Set on an island resort town in North Carolina, Up Through the Water tells of summer people and islanders, mothers and sons, women and men, love and its dangers. It is the story of Emily, a woman as free as the waves she swims in every day off Ocracoke Island, of the man who wants to clip her wings, of her son and the summer that he will become a man. From the author of Sister Golden Hair and other acclaimed works, this is a novel filled with "vigorous characters we cannot help but care about, doing interesting things in a place that is vivid and distinctive" (Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel).
"The sensuous lure of summer—from primal, enveloping ocean water to the warm touch of the sun—is vividly evoked in this first novel."—Los Angeles Times Book Review
"The book can be read in a couple of hours, but it lingers like memories."—Virginian-Pilot and Ledger-Star
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 1, 1989
      This slight, poetic first novel is set on Ocracoke Island, off the North Carolina coast, during a summer in which 16-year-old Eddie makes plans to lose his virginity with Lila, a practical ``island'' girl, while his fey mother, Emily, moves restlessly from one man to the next. The traditional tension between islanders and off-islanders tightens perceptibly when Emily leaves her long-time lover, ferryman John Berry, in favor of a newcomer to the community, a long-haired chef who goes by the name of Birdflower. Steinke's imagery is at once vivid and delicate: while baking a cake, Emily wipes confectioner's sugar off her hands, leaving ``a mark like angel wings on her dark shorts''; water, the one thing she wholeheartedly gives herself to, goes by in ``a grainy rush of green'' as she somersaults and strokes up through it. Too many moments overimbued with meaning lead nowhere, and characters remain shadowy, but overall this is an intriguing debut that hints at promising work to come.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 29, 1991
      North Carolina's Ocracoke Island is the setting of this intriguing and poetic novel focusing on Emily, who leaves her longtime lover for a newcomer to the community, and on her 16-year-old son, Eddie, an impatient virgin. ``Steinke's imagery is at once vivid and delicate,'' said PW , although ``too many moments overimbued with meaning lead nowhere, and characters remain shadowy.''

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  • English

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