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Summerwater: A Novel

Summerwater: A Novel

Current price: $17.00
Publication Date: January 11th, 2022
Publisher:
Picador
ISBN:
9781250829511
Pages:
208
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

A Best Book of January at O, The Oprah Magazine
A Best Book of the Year at The Guardian, The Times (London), and The Irish Times

“[Moss] writes beautifully about . . . souls in tumult, about people whose lives have not turned out the way they’d hoped . . . There’s little doubt, reading Moss, that you’re in the hands of a sophisticated and gifted writer.” —Dwight Garner, The New York Times

The acclaimed author of Ghost Wall offers a new, devastating, masterful novel of subtle menace.

They rarely speak to one another, but they do take notice—watching from the safety of the park’s rented cabins, peering into the half-lit drizzle of a Scottish summer day, forming judgments based on what little they know of their temporary neighbors. It is the longest day of the year, and as the hours pass nearly imperceptibly, twelve people shift from being strangers, to bystanders, to allies—their idle curiosity sparked into action as tragedy sneaks into their lives.

At daylight, a mother races up the mountain, fleeing into her precious hour of solitude. A retired man studies her return as he reminisces about the park’s better days. A young woman, weary of her attentive boyfriend, distracts herself with speculation about their neighbor’s politics. Alone in a kayak on the dark waters of the loch, a teenage boy escapes the infuriating scrutiny of his family. This cascade of perspectives runs through the community as each inhabitant begins to focus on one particular family that doesn’t belong. Nightfall brings an irrevocable turn.

From Sarah Moss, the acclaimed author of Ghost Wall—a “riveting” (Alyson Hagy, The New York Times Book Review), “sharp tale of suspense” (Margaret Talbot, The New Yorker)—Summerwater is a devastating, masterful novel of subtle menace, a searing exploration of our capacity for kinship and cruelty, and a gorgeous evocation of the natural world as it changes around us, bearing constant witness to our choices.

About the Author

Sarah Moss is the author of the novels The Fell, Summerwater, and Ghost Wall, among other books. Her works have been named a best book of the year in The Guardian, The Times (London), Elle, and the Financial Times, and a New York Times Book Review Editor’s Choice. She was educated at the University of Oxford and now teaches at University College Dublin.

Praise for Summerwater: A Novel

A Best Book of the Year at NPR, The Guardian, The Times (London), and The Irish Times
A Best Book of January: O Magazine
A Most Anticipated Book of 2021: Paperback Paris
Most Anticipated at The Guardian, The Sunday Times, Cosmopolitan, Good Housekeeping, The Irish Times, Stylist, and iNews

“[Moss] writes beautifully about... souls in tumult, about people whose lives have not turned out the way they’d hoped. . .There’s little doubt, reading Moss, that you’re in the hands of a sophisticated and gifted writer."
—Dwight Garner, The New York Times

"Cunning and contemplative."
O Magazine

“Pulsing, glorious… What makes Moss's work so distinctive: the lovely countermelodies of earth, animal, and sky that contextualize human dramas.”
—Annalisa Quinn, NPR

“Sarah Moss has an uncanny ability to prickle the reader’s skin. . .The novel’s explosive conclusion feels like witnessing swamp gas bubbling to the surface and catching fire.”
—Lorraine Berry, The Boston Globe

"The chapters build a superb sense of foreboding... Ms. Moss is masterly with loomings and premonitions."
Wall Street Journal

"The final paragraph of Summerwater is one of the most chilling in recent memory, pointing to the devastating consequences of bigotry and hatred, and to the undeniable mastery of Moss’s storytelling."
The Chicago Review of Books

“Sharp, searching, thoroughly imagined, Summerwater is utterly of the moment, placing its anxious human dots against a vast, indifferent landscape; with its wit and verve and beautiful organization, it throws much contemporary writing into the shade!”
—Hilary Mantel, author of The Mirror & the Light

“A rich parade of inner lives . . . [A] thoughtful investigation into community and difference.”
The Guardian

“This broodingly suspenseful and engagingly intimate novel is a miniature portrait of family life in various forms, of old age and childhood, framed by wild nature, which becomes a character in itself . . . With consummate skill, the author reveals the inner lives of a handful of characters, their meditations by turns intensely moving and laconically humorous . . . while conjuring up both landscape and atmosphere with lyrical delicacy.”
Kirkus, starred review

"Will leave you breathless."
Good Housekeeping, The Best Books to Read in 2021 So Far

“The natural world is a dominant force in this absorbing novel . . . Moss’s insight into her characters’ inner lives is among the many strengths of Summerwater . . . For more than a decade, Sarah Moss has been crafting quiet, complex novels that make an indelible impression on the reader. This is one of her best, and most accessible, and should bring her work to a wider audience.”
—John Boyne, Irish Times

“Nothing escapes Sarah Moss’s sly humor and brilliant touch. Deft and brimming with life, Summerwater is a novel of endless depth. A masterpiece.”
—Jessie Burton, author of The Miniaturist

“Building up a sense of dread in a novel is a subtle art, and Sarah Moss is an absolute master of it . . . It certainly feels like an accurate reflection of our confused, scared, angsty present. Perhaps Moss’s point, though, is that we’re all so busy worrying about the things we can’t influence we’ve lost sight of the things we can.”
—Roger Cox, The Scotsman

“When it comes to the workings of the secret heart, and the exchange between mind and body, this is a writer with few equals (I’m thinking of Anne Enright and Han Kang and not many others) . . . This a writer in whose gifts we trust, and she pulls off feat after feat of daring and empathy and wisdom.”
—Andrew Meehan, Herald Scotland

“There is a sense of unease from the beginning of the novel, that builds—almost imperceptibly—to a deafening thrum of dread, and by the time I reached the end of the novel I could hardly breathe. So, so good.”
—Alice O’Keeffe, The Bookseller

“From the author of Ghost Wall comes another taut psychological novel tinged with menace . . . Sarah Moss roves across a wide cast of characters, dipping into internal worlds marked by anxiety—from casual grumbling about the wrong type of people moving into the area to a newlywed husband’s obsession (unshared by his wife) with simultaneous orgasm. With uncanny insight and wit, Sarah Moss weaves this polyphony of voices into unfolding tragedy, and a meditation with broader social and political implications.”
—Cameron Woodhead, The Sydney Morning Herald

“Moss heaps up the pointers to something terrible with the cruel skill of a horror technician. By the midpoint, reading feels as stressful and claustrophobic as any wet-weather getaway, and just as impossible to get out of before the appalling end . . . The world is getting worse. Moss, though, only seems to be growing more brilliant.”
—Sarah Ditum, The Times (UK)

“Moss is a writer who can say more than most others in half the space. Her latest, a haunting story of alienation set on a Scottish campsite, is the summer’s most interesting read.”
Independent (UK)

“Slim but electrifying... Moss takes us inside each of the characters’ minds brilliantly effectively.”
The Times (UK)

“Masterful. . . Wickedly funny virtuosic writing [with] a dark core.. . [Moss] plants tiny details that raise the pulse. As a result, like the characters, we soon start to see danger everywhere... In Summerwater, Sarah Moss establishes herself as our preeminent chronicler of anxiety.”
—Tara K. Menon, Los Angeles Review of Books

“Though her characters are trapped in their heads as well as in their cabins, Moss has fun letting them loose on the page . . . The smell of blood is never far away in Moss’s work . . . You could call it her breakout novel, which is ironic, since its subject is lockdown . . . it’s attentive to the way we live now and to our divisions . . . there’s range and vitality to the voices.”
—Blake Morrison, London Review of Books

“Tragedy looms but Moss buoys the reader along with wit and compassion as she flits between viewpoints. Endlessly interesting.”
—Hephzibah Anderson, Daily Mail

“This story of a turbulent Scottish holiday is suffused with fascination . . . Briefly juxtaposed lives are caught in vignettes sharp with telling detail and acute observation. Comedy often ripples across the surface . . . The ending is sombre, but the scenes leading up to it in this latest display of Moss’s imaginative versatility shine with intelligence.”
—Peter Kemp, The Sunday Times

Summerwater benefits from the time that has passed since [Ghost Wall], encompassing a wider group of characters to tackle a wider set of issues . . . Few works of fiction published this year will capture the essence of Britain today as well as Moss does in Summerwater . . . Moss has an extraordinary gift for creating fully-formed, authentic people that could have stepped from real-life onto the page, and here she has us eavesdrop on their internal monologues.”
—Charlie Connelly, The New European

“A new Moss novel is always a gift.”
—Anthony Cummins, Daily Mail

“[Sarah] Moss is a writer who can say more than most others in half the space. Her latest, a haunting story of alienation set on a Scottish campsite, is the summer’s most interesting read.”
—Sarah Hughes, iNews

Summerwater is a triumph and confirms Sarah Moss as one of the best writers in Britain today.”
—Fiona Mozley, author of Elmet

"Boy, does Sarah Moss know how to evoke an eerie sense of foreboding . . . Evocative and compelling reading, particularly if you're on a staycation this summer.”
—Cyan Turan, Cosmopolitan

“With delicate precision, Summerwater takes the moral and emotional temperature of a whole society. It is matchless, too, in its blending of steely insight with humor and compassion.”
—Pankaj Mishra, author of Age of Anger

“[Sarah] Moss’s work has an uncanny prescience . . . There is something all too familiar in the uneasy frustrations of her multigenerational cast of 12, incarcerated in damp cabins, enduring lashing rain, bored and on a knife edge . . . Moss cleverly subverts expectations . . . Fluent and absorbing . . . assured yet brutal.”
—Catherine Taylor, Prospect

“Sarah Moss [is] one of the most interesting writers working today.”
—John Boyne, Daily Mail

“A slim, spare, suspenseful tale, mud-flecked with disquieting horror.”
—Patricia Nicol, The Daily Mail

Summerwater is a beautiful book, written with delicacy and grace, yet with an undertow as dark as the Scottish loch by which its characters are holidaying in ignorance of the tragedy to come. If you are a huge fan of Sarah Moss’s work, as I am, you will find yourself parceling it out, to read a chapter a day, like a gift.”
—Louise Doughty, author of Platform Seven

“Gorgeously written [and] atmospheric, with a sense of unease that builds to the shocking ending.”
—Joanne Finney, Good Housekeeping

“Sarah Moss is the most brilliant writer. She deserves to win all the prizes.”
—Joanna Trollope, author of City of Friends

“This novel—about crisis and isolation in its own ways—moved and encouraged me in difficult times. Another deft, sensitive, crystalline book by Sarah Moss; I loved it.”
—Megan Hunter, author of The End We Start From

“Tense and atmospheric.”
—Francesca Brown, Stylist

“I read this brilliant novel in one greedy gulp. Sarah Moss is an acute observer of modern life and puts humanity on the page with deep understanding and wit.”
—Cathy Rentzenbrink, author The Last Act of Love

“A masterful and immersive exercise in tension; here are the many conflicting voices of modern Britain in microcosm. Sarah Moss reminds us that society is only ever two short steps away from collapse.”
—Benjamin Myers, author of The Offing

Praise for Sarah Moss

"Sarah Moss possesses the rare light touch when it comes to melding the uncanny with social commentary."
Maureen Corrigan, NPR

“Moss’s star is firmly in the ascendant.”
Guardian

“Moss has quietly, and it must be said remarkably quickly, been putting out some of the most interesting and carefully sculpted novels of recent years.”
Financial Times

“One of our very best contemporary novelists.”
Independent (UK)