By Caroline Sulzer
In the Disappearing Water is a fascinating story, dark and deep,
yet full of hope and longing. There is much in life that is beyond rational
comprehension. Mystery resounds in silence like a solitary snow angel,
the displacement of water in a bathtub, a still life image and life that
refuses to be stilledócannot be packed away, domesticated or slaughtered.
Love, perhaps the greatest mystery, with its comings and goings on, is
carried like a bucket of stones, close to the chest, and passed along.
Caroline Sulzer takes her readers to captivating places that may be hauntingly
familiar, yet surprisingly other.
Geraldine Cannon, author of Glad
Wilderness (Plain View
Press, 2008),
professor, University of Maine at Fort Kent
The language of In the Disappearing Water is like a precise and piercing
needle. The storyís hypnotic pacing, and the tentative, growing
alliance of its main characters, draws a reader deeper into the meat
industry and the damage done to animals and to the people who work slaughtering
them. That violence inhabits the personal histories of the characters.
For some, detachment is both a solution and another devastation, as in
the story of a man who cannot bend to the task of love, but ultimately
nothing can undercut the strength of the love shared by the bookís
newfound family.
Nancy English, freelance writer,
restaurant reviewer, and
author of Maine
and Maritimes Guidebooks, (Countryman Press)
Caroline Sulzer writes like a dream. Sheís that rarity, a true
wordsmith, in whose hands language takes on magical and transforming
power, no matter what the subject, reminiscent of Alice Hoffman. In the
Disappearing Water focuses on the inhumanity of slaughterhouses, so the
images and overall effect are both lyrical and devastating. This theme
weaves through the story of two young women, their friendship and childhood
memories, evoked with elegant understatement. Sulzerís heroines
emerge as humans we know, and the animals we encounter are spared sentimentality.
This captivating novel is both a warm-hearted portrait and a hard, 21st-century
look at our relationship with the animals we eat.
Kitty Beer, author of What
Love Canít Do (Plain View Press, 2008)
ISBN: 978-0-911051-19-3
208 pages
This product was added to our catalog on Friday 06 February, 2009.