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Drowning Ruth: A Novel
 
 

Drowning Ruth: A Novel (Hardcover)

by Christina Schwarz (Author) "I suppose people will say it was my fault, that if I'd not gone home that March in 1919, Mathilda, my only sister, would not..." (more)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (296 customer reviews)

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From Amazon.com

Oprah Book Club® Selection, September 2000: For 19th-century novelists--from Jane Austen to George Eliot, Flaubert to Henry James--social constraint gave a delicious tension to their plots. Yet now our relaxed morals and social mobility have rendered many of the classics untenable. Why shouldn't Maisie know what she knows? It will all come out in family therapy anyway. The vogue for historical novels depends in part on our pleasure in reentering a world of subtle cues and repressed emotion, a time in which a young woman could destroy her life by saying yes to the wrong man. After all, there was no reliable birth control, no divorce, no chance of an independent life or a scandal-free separation.

Christina Schwarz's suspenseful debut pivots on two of the lost "virtues" of the past: silence and stoicism. Drowning Ruth opens in 1919, on the heels of the influenza epidemic that followed the First World War. Although there were telephones and motor cars and dance halls in the small towns of Wisconsin in those years, the townspeople remained rigid and forbidding. As a young woman, Amanda Starkey, a Lutheran farmer's daughter, had been firmly discouraged from an inappropriate marriage with a neighboring Catholic boy. A few years later, as a nurse in Milwaukee, she is seduced by a dishonorable man. Her shame sends her into a nervous breakdown, and she returns to the family farm. Within a year, though, her beloved sister Mathilde drowns under mysterious circumstances. And when Mathilde's husband, Carl, returns from the war, he finds his small daughter, Ruth, in Amanda's tenacious grip, and she will tell him nothing about the night his wife drowned. Amanda's parents, too, are long gone. "I killed my parents. Had I mentioned that?" muses Amanda.

I killed them because I felt a little fatigued and suffered from a slight, persistent cough. Thinking I was overworked and hadn't been getting enough sleep, I went home for a short visit, just a few days to relax in the country while the sweet corn and the raspberries were ripe. From the city I brought fancy ribbon, two boxes of Ambrosia chocolate, and a deadly gift... I gave the influenza to my mother, who gave it to my father, or maybe it was the other way around.
Schwarz is a skillful writer, weaving her grim tale across several decades, always returning to the fateful night of Mathilde's death. Drowning Ruth displays her gift for pacing and her harsh insistence on the right ending, rather than the cheery one. --Regina Marler


From Publishers Weekly

"Ruth remembered drowning." The first sentence of this brilliantly understated psychological thriller leaps off the page and captures the reader's imagination. In Schwarz's debut novel, brutal Wisconsin weather and WWI drama color a tale of family rivalry, madness, secrets and obsessive love. By March 1919, Nurse Amanda Starkey has come undone. She convinces herself that her daily exposure to the wounded soldiers in the Milwaukee hospital where she works is the cause of her hallucinations, fainting spells and accidents. Amanda journeys home to the family farm in Nagawaukee, where her sister, Mathilda (Mattie), lives with her three-year-old daughter Ruth, awaiting the return of her war-injured husband, Carl Neumann. Mattie's ebullient welcome convinces Amanda she can mend there. But then Mattie drowns in the lake that surrounds the sisters' island house and, in a rush of confusion and anguish, Amanda assumes care of Ruth. After Carl comes home, Amanda and he manage to work together on the farm and parent Ruth, but their arrangement is strained: Amanda has a breakdown and recuperates at a sanatorium. As time passes, Ruth grows into an odd, guarded child who clings to perplexing memories of the night her mother drowned. Why does Amanda have that little circle of scars on her hand? What is Amanda's connection to Ruth's friend Imogene and why does she fear Imogene's marriage to Clement Owen's son? Schwarz deftly uses first-person narration to heighten the drama. Her prose is spare but bewitching, and she juggles the speakers and time periods with the surety of a seasoned novelist. Rather than attempting a trumped-up suspenseful finale, Schwarz ends her novel gently, underscoring the delicate power of her tale. Agent, Jennifer R. Walsh at the Writers Shop. Literary Guild, Doubleday Book Club, Teen People and Mango Book Club main selections; film rights optioned by Miramax, Wes Craven to direct; foreign rights sold in Germany, France, the U.K., Japan, Italy, the Netherlands, Finland, Sweden and Denmark. (Aug.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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I suppose people will say it was my fault, that if I'd not gone home that March in 1919, Mathilda, my only sister, would not be dead. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

296 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
 (97)
3 star:
 (46)
2 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (296 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars The Most Inane Drivel, April 11 2004
This review is from: Drowning Ruth: A Novel (Paperback)
(...) I had very low expectations for DROWNING RUTH, (...)but even those very low expectations didn't come close to being fulfilled. I saw DROWNING RUTH in an airport bookshop and, being able to make up my own mind about books, (...), I bought DROWNING RUTH because the cover blurb made it sound interesting. I guess I was too preoccupied with my flight (which was going to be a very long one) to realize that editors can make anything, even the most inane drivel, sound interesting.

Let's get one thing straight: DROWNING RUTH is certainly NOT a thriller and it's only marginally psychological, if that. (...) As for the "thriller" part, well, this is a book with very little plot and the ending can be predicted almost from page one. I'm not kidding or being nasty.

I really don't need a lot of plot in the books I read (...), but I do need complex characters that I want to spend time with and care about, i.e., either love or hate. [This book] doesn't give us either. There is really no one to like and the "bad" guys simply aren't bad enough. (...) If that is what happened (and I have no way of knowing), then it certainly backfired as it almost always does. Readers don't like weak characters be they bad, good or something in between.

Structurally, DROWNING RUTH is a mess. (...) transitions from one character to the next, from one time period to the next, are awkward and choppy. (...) flashbacks are terrible. (...) prose is okay, but what plot there is is scattered and trails off into meaningless subplots far too much of the time. I did finish the book, but only because I have a penchant for finishing every book I begin. Honestly (and I really mean this), I found staring out the window of the plane at the black night sky and the blinking red light on the wing of the 767 more interesting.

DROWNING RUTH was one of the worst books I've ever read. It has no continuity, no throughline, no one to love or hate and it's dreadfully predictable. (...). Books like this don't do anything but make people mad.

Two thumbs and eight fingers down. Way down.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Waste of money...., Feb 6 2004
By Dark Poet (Tennessee, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Drowning Ruth: A Novel (Paperback)
"A gripping psychological thriller..." Well, that is what the back of the book claims. But after reading it i realize that is a bare faced lie. The book is psychological. But it is not even close to a thriller. Can you call a book a thriller when it takes several decades to finish?
When I first looked at this book I was interested. It sounded like a gripping tail. And I also found the 1919 setting as a good choice too. I would also like to commend Christina Schwarz on her writing style. She jumps back and forth between characters, and that does liven things up.
OK. So now that we have the very short list of the books strengths lets get right on to the meat of this review: the many horrible faults!
As I said before I liked Mrs. Schwarz's writing style. Unfortunately, her imagination doesn't catch up with it! A story moves you when you invest in one or more of the characters. So who in the world do you like in this story? Mathilda is dead. Her husband emotionally crippled. And her sister Amanda is totally insane! Ruth is one of the only characters that you will like in the story. But even that falls short because you don't really hear from her that much till the later parts of the story.
I don't know about other readers, but I don't like being able to easily guess who the "bad guy" is in the story. But even worse, after a while I found myself reading the book, just so I could see the end! And it was kind of disappointing too.
I ended up buying two copies of the book. One for me and the other for my girlfriend. I wish I had read my copy first. That way I would have never been dumb enough to buy a second copy! Unless you can buy this cheap, save your hard earned money!
Hopefully Mrs. Schwarz will have a little more plot in her second novel. Although, I will not waste money on that one. Think I will go to the library when it comes out...........
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5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing Grace, Oct 16 2006
By Susan Bock (Ontario) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
What I really liked about this novel, apart from the skillful style and the author's prodigious understanding of the emotional life, was its ending. Ruth, despite her appalling entrance into life, turns out fine because her aunt puts so much effort into raising her and she probably would have done it even without the guilt about her past.
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars it's OK i guess..
This book is good enough for me to keep turning the pages until I reached the second half of it. It's OK I guess but I thought there was more to it.... Read more
Published on Aug 30 2005 by Just another reader

5.0 out of 5 stars Moves along swimmingly
I thoroughly enjoyed DROWNING RUTH -- from its memorable, engaging first sentence ("Ruth remembered drowning." How could *that* be? Read more
Published on Jun 21 2005 by Sachan Armatis

3.0 out of 5 stars i thought it would be better..
i picked this book up in the library after reading good reviews on it from here. maybe its just me, but this book didn't live up to all the hype it got from some other reviewers... Read more
Published on Jul 14 2004 by aquakit

4.0 out of 5 stars Drowning everyone
The title is very symbolic. It does not only refer to the physical drowning as experienced by some of the characters, but also to the suffocating love & possesiveness of... Read more
Published on Jul 12 2004 by Alexi

2.0 out of 5 stars WOW!
This book rocked my socks! I loved the way it was written and how it went back in time and then to present. It always kept me guessing. You have got to read this book!!
Published on Jul 10 2004

3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting title, but pass...
Not horrible, but really not that interesting of a story. The story is told in a way that shifts narrators and time period in a way that is not easy to follow. Read more
Published on Jun 26 2004

2.0 out of 5 stars Difficult to "wade" through
Hmmmm, it's surprising to me to read all the other glowing reviews about this book. I'll admit, it catches your attention at the beginning, and keeps you guessing, but the... Read more
Published on Jun 12 2004 by tarabky3

4.0 out of 5 stars A Spellbinding, Depressing Psychological Thriller!
The story of a young girl whose mother mysteriously drowned while her husband was away at war and whose troubled aunt then takes over her upbringing (whew! Read more
Published on May 20 2004 by Hannah C.

5.0 out of 5 stars Couldn't put the book down!!!!
I thought this book was brilliant. The character development made you feel like you actually knew Ruth and Amanda. Read more
Published on May 19 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars ----- What Secrets We Keep ------
Loved this book! First off, great book to read in the dead of winter. Curl up & get comfy 'cause it gets your attention. Read more
Published on May 4 2004 by Leigh A. Taft

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