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The Seas

The Seas

List Price: $23.00
Your Price: $15.64
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: "The ocean is full of everything, except mercy."
Review:

Sleeping in the bathtub on the third floor of the weathered house, where she can see the stars from the window above, a child pressed her ear to the drainpipe so she could hear her parents whispering all night. But one night, her father said, "I remember how the moon shines into the ocean and the pattern it makes on the sea floor" and her mother began to cry. She had never heard her mother cry before. Soon after, her father disappeared into the sea and mother and daughter spend their lives waiting for him to return.

Even as a young woman, the daughter never forgets how her father once told her she was a mermaid, a gift from the sea. Clinging to this small fantasy, the girl spins out a story where she exists in a separate reality, in the blue cocoon of ocean that gave her life.

An integral part of this intricate fantasy, the much older Jude steps out of the sea one day, almost a vision of her father, at least, close enough for an eighteen year old girl longing for his return. She, her mother and grandfather have kept a lonely vigil, waiting year after year for him to come home to them, unable to give up hope. Struggling to emerge from this still life as a mermaid, into a more functional reality, the young woman is beset on all sides by the presence and power of the sea, as it offers imprisonment or release. Propelled into her own future, the girl is at a critical impasse, brought about by her intense need for Jude to be all things, lover, father, savior, failure.

The author has a remarkable talent for description, drawing the reader into her images, such as the strange sounds of the deaf world, the inner workings of a lonely woman's heart and the incandescence of hope on the horizon. Hunt spills words like breadcrumbs through the forest... impossible not to follow. This is fiction as it was meant to be, visually stimulating and deeply satisfying, with an understanding of the inner lives of others, the deepest chambers of the human heart. Luan Gaines/ 2004.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brilliant
Review: "The Seas" is a brilliant blend of fairy tale, dry wit, psychology & travel guide wrapped up like an exquisite poem. It is simultaneously hilarious and tragic. I recommend this smart, lingering story above any book I've read, ever.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Mermaid's Tale From The Depths - Hauntingly Beautiful!
Review: "The Seas'" narrator is nineteen, a waif-like girl who, unable to move from adolescence to womanhood, believes herself to be a mermaid. When she was eight years-old, her father walked into the sea, never to be seen again. She and her mother often sit on the beach, near the ocean's edge where his footprints were last seen, watching - waiting for him to return. Wet footprints appear to her in the oddest places, convincing her that he has come back. He had told her that she was a mermaid - a gift from the sea. After all these years, she still believes him and reasons that if her father is alive, then he must be a creature of the sea and that she, his daughter, must be the same. And like the mermaids in Hans Christian Andersen's tale, and Friedrich de La Motte Fouque's "Undine," our lost young protagonist loves a man and longs for him to return her intense affections. Unlike the fairy tales, however, one assumes she is not dependent on this man's love to gain a mortal soul.

Jude, the man in question, is older, nearly twice her age. He returned from the Iraq War terribly changed, war-torn. After serving three years and seven months in the Army, he had decided to stay at the front a bit longer. He needed the money. He was finally evacuated for Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome and shipped back to the States. The bleak, Northeastern seaside town where they live has nothing to offer him, nor anyone else really. He doesn't own a fishing boat, which is the only way to make money in the tiny hamlet. Our mermaid is certain that Jude, now a hard drinking, womanizing sailor, is her prince. Jude, however, has problems of his own. Never having fully recovered from the traumas of battle, he believes the young woman is forbidden to him. She is like a critical war secret he has been prohibited to reveal. "Like if I say your name or if I touch you, I'd get court-martialed, found guilty, and executed."

Ms. Hunt's narrative is sparse and somewhat random in nature, according to her protagonist's apparent whims. It almost reads like a personal journal, with chapter titles for each entry. A literary work, "The Seas" is hauntingly beautiful with lyrical, almost ethereal prose and filled with ocean imagery. An atmosphere of melancholy permeates, with mystical, fantastical elements. The young woman's angst, and the sorrows of her wounded warrior, wrench the heart. There is dark humor here also. "All mermaids do is swim around and kill sailors. Not a great job."

The characters are brilliantly portrayed, including the grandfather who is obsessed with typesetting a dictionary. He gives his granddaughter words and definitions to ponder throughout, and the story is filled with typographical games. He discovers a word in a Russian English dictionary, "razbliuto." He says there is no English equivalent. "The word means, the feelings one retains for someone he once loved," he explains, and challenges his listeners to come up with an English one word meaning. When everyone fails, the old man continues, "It's like the little house love moved out of, maybe a hermit crab moves in and carries the house across the floor of a tidal pool. The lover sees the old love moving and it looks like it's alive again." This is a poignant novel, sometimes almost painful. Don't let that put you off. "The Seas" mesmerizes. It is a fabulous tale and is so worth the read. I loved this book!

Samantha Hunt has been twice nominated for a Pushcart Prize and has been published in the anthology Trampoline, McSweeney's, Colorado Review, Jubilat, The Literary Review, The Iowa Review, Western Humanities Review, NewMediaPoets.com, and has appeared on NPR's "This American Life."
JANA

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: ethereal & vibrant prose in Hunt's debut
Review: Reviewed by Patricia D. Weisgerber for Small Spiral Notebook

Imagine that Hans Christian Anderson has finally reached his limit with the various `Disney-fied' adaptations of his story, "The Little Mermaid", and mentions his frustration to Winslow Homer, Charles Dickens and H.P. Lovecraft over drinks up in Heaven. All agree and contribute ideas for a re-write. And perhaps they've funneled their vision through Samantha Hunt, and, thus, her first novel, The Seas, might have been born.

Samantha Hunt writes as if her pen were a sable paintbrush. Though we never know the name of our heroine/protagonist, we see her plainly and vividly, a waif of a soul living in a northern seacoast town where `The highway only goes south from here'. With rocky coastal beaches, frozen water and not much else, a bleak future lies ahead for anyone unfortunate to live there. And while this young woman is aware of her salt-of-the-earth lineage, she has come to believe she's unlike anyone else in the town. She believes she is a mermaid.

The catalyst for this belief is her father's disappearance eleven years before when he walked into the ocean and never came back. While the rest of the town accepts this as suicide, the young woman's mother still waits for her missing husband to return. This, in turn, only strengthens the young woman's conviction. In her mind, she reasons that if her father is alive, then he must be a creature of the sea and, therefore, she must be a mermaid as he had commented many years before.

As with Anderson's mermaid, there is a prince, Jude, only he has been served a fate not unlike a character from a Dicken's tale. A veteran of the Gulf War, he is an alcoholic womanizer who carries a secret that is tearing him apart. Our young woman yearns for him and offers herself openly, only to be shunned. And, we all know the fate that awaits a mermaid who cannot win the love of her prince.

Hunt portrays the conflicts and confusion of the young heroine convincingly through the use of first person. There is an ethereal quality to her vibrant prose, which fluctuates between the earthly and mythical worlds of the main character's mind. Despite the mystical elements, the angst and the reality of the hard circumstances are always as sharp as the jagged rocks of a cliffwalk. The Seas is a mesmerizing story, one that draws you in like a soft September undertow and it's not until you feel the chill of the deep ocean that you realize how far from shore you are.



Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A 21st Century Emily Bronte!
Review: This is a remarkable novel. It's hard to believe that Samantha Hunt hasn't been writing novels for a long time, yet the (extremely attractive) woman on the bookjacket is clearly young.

As I read this book, "Emily Bronte" kept creeping into my mind. The ocean is hardly a moor, but Ms. Hunt owns her piece of the world every bit as thorouhly as Bronte did.

It's a haunting story, bound to end as it does, but full of surprises along the way. The (unnamed) woman at the center of the book is thoroughly sympathetic, even in her wildest flights of fancy.

Any reader willing to suspend disbelief for the length of this book will be thoroughly rewarded.


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